1705

"Your journey may be highly conducive to the safety of our country."

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles Start Price:40.00 USD Estimated At:80.00 - 110.00 USD
 Your journey may be highly conducive to the safety of our country.
A.L.S., probably retained clerical copy, of Maj. Gen. Elijah Wadsworth, 4th Div., O(hio) Militia, "Head Quarters, Cleveland," Sept. 10, 1812, 8 x 13 3/4. To Gen. Findlay (for whom the Ohio city named). "I think it of the utmost importance to the military service of the country that you should proceed to Niagara, & communicate to the officers commanding verbally; & I deem it my duty to request you to go there & also to see Gen. Dearborn if practicable in a short period of time. With my best wishes that your journey may be highly conducive to the safety of our country." Penned on grey ledger sheet, ruled in brown-red, some handling wrinkles, edge toning, else about very good. Rising from cornet to captain in the Continental Dragoons during the Revolution, Wadsworth "served from Bunker Hill to Yorktown..." --Lineage Book, D.A.R., Vol. 35, p. 319. An important figure in early Ohio Western Reserve history, he appears in Lossing's Pictorial Field Book of the War of 1812, William Henry Harrison and the Conquest of the Ohio Country (Skaggs, 2014), and Ohio and its People (Knepper, 2003). His Papers reside in the Western Reserve Historical Society. * Attractive partly printed War of 1812 enlistment document, Johnstown, Montgomery County, N.Y., June 14, 1813, 6 1/2 x 7 1/4. For Obadiah Spencer, born in Paulding, Dutchess County, "of ruddy complexion, blue eyes, sandy hair," enlisting "as a Soldier in the Army of the U.S., for...five years...and that I will serve them honestly and faithfully against their enemies and opposers...and obey the orders of the President...." Signed by Spencer and Justice of Peace. Fine. (2 pcs.)