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     MAJ. 
			JONATHAN HASKELL was born in Rochester, Mass., the 19th of 
			March, 1775.  Like the larger portion of the New Englanders of 
			that day, he was brought up on a farm, and received only a common 
			school education, which fitted him for conducting the usual concerns 
			of life to which he might be called. 
     At the commencement of the war of Independence, when he 
			was twenty years old, he was engaged in agriculture.  How early 
			he entered the army is not known.  In 1779 he was aid-de-camp 
			to Gen. Patterson, of the Massachusetts line, and was 
			commissioned as a lieutenant.  He continued to serve until the 
			close of the war, either as an aid, or in the line of the army. 
     When the Ohio Company was formed, he became an 
			associate, and moved out there in company with Capt. Devol's 
			family, in the autumn of 1788.  In 1789 he united with the 
			Belpre settlement, and commenced clearing his farm.  On the 
			breaking out of the Indian war, in January, 1791, he received the 
			appointment of captain in the regular service, and went to 
			Rochester, Mass., where he recruited a company, and returned to 
			Marietta in December; where he was stationed for the defense of 
			that, and the adjacent settlements; as the troops had been withdrawn 
			from Fort Harmer in the fall of 1790.  After the defeat of 
			Gen. St. Clair, he remained in Marietta until March, 1 793, when 
			he was commissioned as a captain in the second sub-legion under 
			Gen. Wayne, and joined the army on the frontiers that summer.  
			He was stationed at Fort St. Clair, where he remained until June, 
			1794, when he was appointed to the command of the fourth sub-legion, 
			ranking as a major, although his commission was not filled until 
			August, 1795.  In a letter to Griffin Greene, Esq., 
			whose relative he married, he gives a sketch of the campaign which 
			defeated the combined forces of the Indians and closed the war. 
     "HEAD QUARTERS, MIAMI OF THE LAKE, August 29th, 1794. 
     SIR: The 28th of July the army moved forward, 
			consisting of about eighteen hundred regulars and fifteen hundred 
			militia, from the state of Kentucky, passing by the way of St. 
			Clair's battle ground, now Fort Recovery.  We then turned more 
			to the eastward, and struck the St. Mary's in twenty miles, where we 
			erected a small fort, and left a sub altern's command.  We then 
			crossed the St. Mary's, and in four or five days' marching found the 
			Auglaize river, and continued on down that stream to its junction 
			with the Miami of the lake; distant one hundred miles from 
			Greenville, by the route we pursued.  At this place we built a 
			garrison and left a major to command it.  The army then marched 
			down the river forty-seven miles from the new garrison and on the 
			20th inst., at nine o'clock in the morning, came up with the 
			Indians, who had posted themselves in a position chosen as most 
			favorable for defense.  The troops charged upon them with the 
			bayonet, and drove them two miles, through a thicket of woods, 
			fallen timber, and underbrush, when the cavalry fell upon and 
			entirely routed them.  Our line extended two and a half miles, 
			and yet it was with difficulty we outflanked them.  One of the 
			prisoners, a white man, says the number of the Indians engaged was 
			about twelve hundred, aided by two hundred and fifty white men form 
			Detroit.  Our loss in the action was two officers killed, and 
			four wounded, with abut thirty days killed, and eighty wounded.  
			The Indians suffered much; about forty or fifty of their dead fell 
			into our hands.  The prisoner was asked why they did not fight 
			better?  He said that we would give them no time to load their 
			pieces, but kept them constantly on the run.  Two miles in 
			advance of the battleground, is a British garrison, established last 
			spring, which we marched round within pistol shot, and demanded a 
			surrender; but they refused to give it up.  Our artillery being 
			too light, and the fort too strong to carry by storm, it was not 
			attacked; but we burnt their out-houses, destroyed all their 
			gardens, cornfields, and grass, within musket shots of the place, 
			and all below for eight or nine miles, without any opposition.  
			On the 27th we arrived at this place, where we have a fort, and 
			shall halt a few days to rest.  We have marched through the 
			Indian settlements and villages for about sixty miles, destroyed 
			several thousand acres of corn, beans, and all kinds of 
			vegetables, burned their houses, with furniture, tools &c.  A 
			detachment has gone into Fort Recovery for a supply of provisions 
			for the troops, and when it returns, we shall march up the Miami 
			sixty miles, to where the St. Mary's unites with the St. Joseph's, 
			and destroy all the corn in that country. 
     This letter describes, in plain terms, the ruin and 
			devastation that marked the course of the American army.  It 
			might have been considered a wise policy to devote to 
			destruction the dwellings, cornfields, gardens, and in fact every 
			species of property that belonged to the hostile savages, but it was 
			also a most cruel policy.  The British troops, in their 
			inroads amongst the rebel settlements of the Revolutionary war, 
			never conducted more barbarously.  The Indian villages on the 
			Miami and the Auglaize, were snugly and comfortably built - were 
			furnished with many convenient articles of house-keeping and 
			clothing.  They had large fields of corn and beans, with 
			gardens of melons, squashes, and various other vegetables. Mr. 
			Joseph Kelly,  of Marietta, then a boy of twelve years old, 
			and for several years a prisoner with the Indians who treated him 
			kindly and was adopted into a family as one of their own children, 
			was living at this time with  them at the junction of the St. 
			Mary's and Auglaize, the spot where Maj. Haskell says the 
			army would next go, to complete their work of destruction.  
			Mr. Kelly was there when an Indian runner announced that the 
			American troops had arrived in the vicinity of the village.  
			His friends had not expected them so soon, and with the utmost haste 
			and consternation, the old men, with the utmost haste and 
			consternation, the old men, with the women and children, the 
			warriors being absent, hurried aboard their canoes, taking nothing 
			with them but a few kettles and blankets, not having time to collect 
			any provisions from their fields and gardens.  The sun was only 
			an hour or two high when they departed, in as deep sorrow at the 
			loss of their country and homes, as the Trojans of old when they 
			evacuated their favorite city.  Before the next day at noon, 
			their nice village was burnt to the ground; their cornfields of 
			several hundred acres, just beginning to ripen, were cut down and 
			trampled under foot by the horses and oxen of the invaders, while 
			their melons and squashes were pulled up by the roots.  The 
			following winter, the poor Indians deprived of their stock of corn 
			and beans, which were grown every year and laid up for their winter 
			food as regularly as among the white people, suffered the extreme of 
			want.  Game was scarce in the country they retreated to on the 
			west of the Miami, and what few deer and fish they could collect, 
			barely served to keep them alive.  It was a cruel policy; but 
			probably subdued their Spartan courage more than two or three 
			defeats, as for many years thereafter, until the days of Tecumseh, 
			they remained at peace. 
     After the close of the war, Maj. Haskell 
			returned to his farm at Belpre, where he died in December, 1814.  
			He was considered a brave man and a good officer.  Several of 
			his descendants are living in Washington county. 
			SOURCE: Biographical and 
			Historical Memoirs of the Early Pioneer Settlers of Ohio with 
			Narratives of Incidents and Occurrences in 1775
			by S. P. Hildreth, M. D. and Colonel R. J. Meigs -
			Publ. Cincinnati: H. W. Derby & Co., Publishers - 1852 - Page 
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