Sunday,
July 8, 1832. Camp on White Water River,
Old Indian Village. | Indian guides advise Gen.
Atkinson that White Water cannot be turned. Council of war is held, deciding to
return to mouth of river, near present Fort Atkinson. After two-day chase
through swamps and sink holes, enemy is as far away as ever. "If we had pushed
on up the river," wrote Gov. Reynolds later, "by forced marches, for a day or
two, the Indians would have been reached and the war ended."
John Reynolds, Reynolds' History of Illinois. My Own Times: Embracing also the
History of My Life (Chicago: Chicago Historical Society, 1879),
251. On reaching camp site of 6th, army halts.
Atkinson Letter Book,
Johnston Journal, Black Hawk War Collection, Abraham Lincoln
Presidential Library and Museum, Springfield, IL; John H. Wakefield,
Wakefield's History of the Black Hawk War
(Chicago: Caxton Club, 1908), 83. |