- Antony Wayne letter to George Washington.
New Bridge - 21 July 1780
Being convinced that our field-pieces were too light to make the wished impression on the block-house by Bull's Ferry, from an experience of more than an hour (at no greater distance than from fifty to seventy yards)...
- Antony Wayne letter to George Washington.
Totowa, NJ - 22 July 1780
On reconnoitring the refugee post, near Bull's Ferry, we found it to consist of a block-house, surrounded by an abatis and stockade to the perpendicular rocks next to the North River, with a kind of ditch, or parapet, serving as a covered way.
- Antony Wayne letter to George Washington.
Mount Kemble, NJ - 2 January 1781
The most general and unhappy mutiny suddenly took place in the Pennsylvania line, about nine o'clock last night. It yet subsists.
- Antony Wayne letter to George Washington.
Chickahominy, VA - 8 July 1781
After a variety of marches and countermarches, frequently offering battle to Lord Cornwallis upon military terms, the Marquis De Lafayette received intelligence on the 5th that the enemy had marched from Williamsburg for Jamestown
