Page:Historic highways of America (Volume 7).djvu/174

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AMERICAN PORTAGES

On October 28, 1778,[1] Hamilton left the Miamis' town, where he held conferences with the Indians, and proceeded to Pied-froid, on the other side of the river St. Joseph.

The day following the gun-boat was placed on the carriage with great difficulty. Two officers were left to forward the boats from the portage, and Hamilton walked to the further end of the carrying place, three leagues, where the provisions were collected. He ordered two officers with the six-pounder and ammunition to go down to carry in pirogues. "This carry is one of the sources of the Wabash," Hamilton wrote in his Journal, "and takes its rise on the level plain, which is a height of land near the Miamis town. The carry is called 'petite rivière.'[2] Where the pirogues were first launched, it is only wide enough for one boat, and is much embarrassed with logs and stumps. About four miles below is a beaver dam,[3] and to these

  1. The following are notes on and extracts from Hamilton's Journal preserved at Harvard University.
  2. Little River.
  3. "The Beaver are never molested at this place by