Monday,
July 9, 1832. Camp on White Water River,
Old Indian Village. | Gen. Atkinson writes Gen.
Winfield Scott: "The country is so cut up with Prairie, wood and swamp, that it
is extremely difficult to approach them. Indeed many parts of the country for
miles is entirely unpassable, even on foot. We are engaged at this moment [July
9] in throwing a Bridge across this creek (White Water) with a view of getting
up with the enemy, who is represented to be only five or six miles before us."
Gen. Atkinson has 450 regulars, and about 2,100 mounted volunteers, with 100
Indian allies.Atkinson Letter Book, Black Hawk War Collection,
Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum, Springfield, IL. Early's company is probably one of scouting parties sent out in
morning. They report Indians still nearby, but later party returns with news
that Sauk have advanced "up the country" about 12 miles, causing Atkinson to
postpone pursuit.Atkinson Letter Book, 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), 83-84; Stevens,
Black Hawk War, 210;
Johnston Journal, Black Hawk War Collection,
Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum, Springfield, IL. |