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. 28.Clark, Clark s Memoir, whole assault, 474 78; Clark s knowledge of town s de-fenselessness, 476.29.Ibid., 479.30.Ibid., 475, 481.31.Ibid., 473.32.Ibid., 483 84.33.John D.Barnhart, ed., Henry Hamilton and George Rogers Clark in the AmericanRevolution, with the Unpublished Journal of Lieut.Gov.Henry Hamilton (Crawfordsville, IN:R.E.Banta, 1951), 147 49.34.At the outset of his march, Clark presented Hamilton as having quite a force, andupon seeing Vincennes, he made much of the upwards of six hundred men spotted intown; Clark, Memoir, 518, 528, respectively.Hamilton had only a small force at FortSackville, however.Seventy-five of his French militia defected to Clark along with gun-powder (seventy had earlier defected to Hamilton, on his approach to Vincennes, 149),leaving Hamilton with only thirty-nine men, some of whom were sick and/or wounded.Barnhart, Henry Hamilton and George Rogers Clark, for seventy-five defectors, 149, 181.For Clark s admission to Hamilton, Account of the Expedition of Lieut.Gov.Hamilton, Reports of the Pioneer Society of the State of Michigan, vol.9, 2nd ed.(Lansing: WynkoopHallenbeck Crawford, 1908), 502; predesertion, Hamilton had thirty-two regulars, sevenirregulars, and around seventy volunteers and sixty Native troops, 492.224 Notes35.Clark, Clark s Memoir, 512 42.36.For Hamilton, see Bernard W.Sheehan, The Famous Hair Buyer General : HenryHamilton, George Rogers Clark, and the American Indian, Indiana Magazine of History79.1 (1983): 13 14; for slanderous rumors about Hamilton presented as sober fact, seeConsul Wilshire Butterfield, Washington-Irvine Correspondence, the Official Letters (Madi-son, WI: David Atwood, 1882), 7 (n 1); for Haldiman s scalp purchases, Account of theExpedition of Lieut.Gov.Hamilton, Pioneer Society of Michigan, 9: 431.37.James, George Rogers Clark Papers, 97.38.Churchill, A Little Matter of Genocide, 182.39.Pennsylvania Archives, First Series, 8: 283.40.Barnhart, Henry Hamilton and George Rogers Clark, 182; Account of the Expedi-tion of Lieut.Gov.Hamilton, Pioneer Society of Michigan, 9: 501.Clark blamed thescalping incident on Two lads, who captured him and who were so inhuman as to takepart of his scalp on the way ; Clark, Clark s Memoir, 534.41.Clark gives the exact number as fifteen; Clark, Clark s Memoir, 541.Hamilton gavethe number as 15 or 16 men ; Barnhart, Henry Hamilton and George Rogers Clark, 182.For Macutté Mong s status, Barnhart, Henry Hamilton and George Rogers Clark, 154.42.Clark, Clark s Memoir, 541.43.Capitalizations as in the original, Illinois State Historical Library, Collections of theIllinois State Historical Library, 8: 144.44.Spellings and parentheses as in the original, Barnhart, Henry Hamilton and GeorgeRogers Clark, 182; for Officers (so called), 187.45.All spellings, italics, and punctuation as in the original, ibid., 182 83.Hamiltonsupplied a few other details of this scene in his official report, Account of the Expeditionof Lieut.Gov.Hamilton, Pioneer Society of Michigan, 9: 501.46.Spelling and capitalizations as in the original, Barnhart, Henry Hamilton and GeorgeRogers Clark, 183.47.All spellings as in original, ibid., 183.48.For controversial, see Sheehan, The Famous Hair Buyer General, 20.ForHamilton s account as taken from eyewitness, Barnhart, Henry Hamilton and George RogersClark, 183.49.Clark, Clark s Memoir, 539.50.Spellings and lack of italics in original; brackets mine, Barnhart, Henry Hamiltonand George Rogers Clark, 187, quotes, 188.51. Account of the Expedition of Lieut.Gov.Hamilton, Pioneer Society of Michigan,9: 505.52.Spellings and lack of italics in original, Barnhart, Henry Hamilton and George RogersClark, 190 91.53.Ibid., 191 205; Illinois State Historical Library, Collections of the Illinois StateHistorical Library, 8: 337 40, 352; Account of the Expedition of Lieut.Gov.Hamilton, Pioneer Society of Michigan, 9: 506 16. The Haldiman Papers, Pioneer Society of Michigan,10: 409.Washington approved Hamilton s treatment because Hamilton had approved ofpractises [sic], which were marked with cruelty towards the people that fell into hishands, such as inciting the Indians to bring in scalps, putting prisoners in irons, andgiving them up to be the victims of savage barbarity ; Thwaites, How George Rogers ClarkWon the Northwest, 63 (n 1).54.Brackets mine, Clark, Clark s Memoir, 539.Notes 22555.As divine, ibid., 539; for extirpated, see Barnhart, Henry Hamilton and GeorgeRogers Clark, 189, punctuation as in the original.56.Illinois State Historical Library, Collections of the Illinois State Historical Library,8: 144.57
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