George Washington Papers
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To George Washington from Brigadier General Anthony Wayne, 10 November 1779

From Brigadier General Anthony Wayne

Acquakeneunk Bridge [N.J.] 10th Novr 1779

Dear General

If not Inconsistant, I should esteem it as a particular favor if your Excellency would permit Major Moore to join my family during the remainder of the Campaign—or until Mr Archer recovers from his late accident.1

I also beg leave to mention that Lieut. Colo. Fleury’s absence2 has made a Vacency in Colo. Febigers Regt a Lieut. Colo. is also wanting in Colo. Meigs’s—& should Major Hull proceed to Boston on the buisness he is appointed to3—a Major will be wanted for Colo. Putnams Regiment, will your Excellency be so Obliging as to Order those Vacancies to be Supplied.

We are again in great distress for want of Shoes & other Clothing—we have not less than One Hundred & twenty men quite barefoot, is there no way to have a Supply sent to this Corps.4

every-thing is very quiet here, I shall make a grand forage tomorrow in Bergen—near the Copper mines in the Vicinity of Paulus Hook.5 Interim I am your Excellency’s most Obt & very Hume Sert.

AL[S], DLC:GW; ADfS, PHi: Wayne Papers.

1Wayne’s aide-de-camp Henry Waldegrave Archer recently had been shot in his right arm during a duel (see Samuel Shaw to Winthrop Sargent, 27 Oct, in “Shaw’s War Letters,” description begins Nicholas B. Wainwright, ed. “Captain Samuel Shaw’s Revolutionary War Letters to Captain Winthrop Sargent.” Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography 70 (1946): 281–324. description ends 303). Wayne desired Maj. Thomas Lloyd Moore to replace Archer.

2Lieutenant Colonel Fleury had secured leave to visit France (see GW to La Luzerne, 23 Sept., and n.3 to that document).

3Maj. William Hull and two other officers submitted a petition to the Massachusetts legislature seeking a solution to the problem of monetary depreciation that rendered army pay nearly worthless (see Campbell, William Hull, description begins Maria Campbell. Revolutionary Services and Civil Life of General William Hull; Prepared from His Manuscripts. … New York, 1848. description ends 171–74).

5For Wayne’s recent foraging in the same general area, see his letter to GW, 4 Nov., and notes 1 and 2 to that document.

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