125 



as a soldier in the continental army at the 

 commencement of the present war, and 

 served fifteen months. Having been pro- 

 perly discharged, I have since married, have 

 a family, and am in communion with the 

 church. 



"To return. — The party by whom we 



were made prisoners had taken some horses, 



and left them at the glades we had passed 



the day before. They had followed on 



our tracks from these glades ; on our return 



to which, we found the horses and rode. 



We were carried to Wachatomakak, a town 



of the Mingoes and Shawanese. I think it 



was on the third day we reached the town ; 



when we were approaching which, the 



Indians, in whose custody we were, began 



to look sour, having been kind to us before, 



and given us a little meat and flour to eat, 



which they had found or taken from some of 



our men on their retreat. This town is 



small, and we were told was about two 



miles distant from the main town, to which 



they meant to carry us. 



