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Fort McIntosh Fort McIntosh at the site of present-day Beaver,
Pennsylvania, was built by General Lachlan McIntosh in 1778 as a
staging ground for a planned military expedition in the west.
Although the expedition was soon abandoned, Fort McIntosh remained
occupied until 1785. Fort Pitt Fort Pitt was the Gateway to the
West at the forks of the Ohio River Valley. Built in 1759 on the
ruins of French Fort Duquesne, it served as an outpost for the
British from 1759-1772. Occupied by the Americans, first by
Virginian forces in 1773, then by troops of the Continental Army in
1777, Fort Pitt remained the primary western post for colonial
forces during the War of American Independence. Logstown Logstown,
at present-day Ambridge, Pennsylvania, was an important center for
frontier diplomacy with the indigenous peoples living in the Ohio
River Valley during the 1740s and 1750s. Occupied from
approximately 1738 to 1758, Logstown was at the center of the
events that shaped the destinies of the indigenous peoples of the
upper Ohio River Valley throughout this period. This edition
reprints three short historical sketches Judge Agnew originally
published in 1893 and 1894. The first, Fort McIntosh: Its Times and
Men, provides a history of Fort McIntosh as well as information
related to Fort Pitt during the later years of War of American
Independence. The second essay, "Fort Pitt" and Its Times, covers
aspects of the history of Fort Pitt not contained in the earlier
work. The third work, "Logstown" on the Ohio, is a history of white
relations with the Native American inhabitants of the village of
Logstown, an important trading center during the 1740s and 1750s.
The Honorable Daniel Agnew (1809-1902) was one of the earliest
residents of Beaver, Pennsylvania. Born in Trenton, New Jersey, his
family moved to Pennsylvania when he was still young. He graduated
from Western University in Pittsburgh in 1825 and began to practice
law. Agnew moved to Beaver in 1829. He became a member of the Whig
Party and was appointed a judge in the 17th Judicial Circuit in
1851. Agnew then served as Chief Justice of Pennsylvania from
1863-1878. After his retirement, he returned to Beaver, where he
spent most of the remainder of life in the pursuit of local
history.
Major General Edward Braddock (1694-1755) A veteran of the
Coldstream Guards and former governor of Gibraltar, Major General
Edward Braddock was given command of a small expeditionary force
sent to North America to remove the French from the continent. His
immediate goal-to dislodge them from Ohio River Valley. His force,
consisting of the veterans of two regular regiments of foot plus
numerous colonial units, was met on the path seven miles from Fort
Duquesne by a small French and Indian army and was soundly
defeated. Braddock, severely wounded, died a few days later. George
Washington (1732-1799) Faced with the prospect of being demoted to
captain, George Washington had resigned his commission in the
Virginia forces in October, 1754 and focused his attention on
organizing his new estate at Mount Vernon. On March 2, 1755, he
received a letter from Braddock's loyal aide-de-camp, Captain
Robert Orme inviting him to join the general's "Family" as an aide.
Washington jumped at this second chance to pursue his goal of a
military career. The young aide, eager to learn, kept his own
personal copy of Braddock's daily orders to the army, known as his
"Orderly Book." Braddock's Orderly Books Washington's copies of
General Braddock's Orderly Books were originally published in 1878
as an appendix to William H. Lowdermilk's History of Cumberland
(Maryland). Lowdermilk's edition, however, contained numerous
errors, with entire pages of the manuscript inserted in the wrong
location. The originals, along with most of George Washington's
papers, are held by the Library of Congress and have now been made
readily available for viewing on the American Memory pages of their
website. This edition reprintsLowdermilk's original. However, a
close comparison has been made to the originals and the appropriate
corrections have now been made. Selected Correspondence of George
Washington Part II of this work contains the correspondence of
George Washington related to the Ohio Expedition of 1755. Included
are his accounts of the Battle of Monongahela sent to Lieutenant
Governor Robert Dinwiddie, his mother Mary Ball Washington, and his
younger brother John Augustine Washington. Washington's letter book
of this time contains memorandums that he inserted later. This
edition publishes those memorandums as Washington originally wrote
them. Appendices The British casualty list from the Battle of
Monongahela as originally published in Lowdermilk. In addition, as
with all Normal Warfare Publications, this work contains an
extensive appendix with biographical information on all the major
participants mentioned within the work.
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