should be misapplied to any other purpose, it would
destroy in embryo every exertion, either for particular
or general safety there. The counties above tide
water, in the middle and southern and western parts
of the country, are not accessible to calls for either
of those purposes, but at such an expense of transportation
as the article would not bear. Here, then, is
a great field, whose supplies of bread cannot be carried
to our army, or, rather, which will raise no supplies
of bread, because there is no body to eat them.
Was it not, then, wise in Congress to remove to that
field four thousand idle mouths, who must otherwise
have interfered with the pasture of our own troops?
And, if they are removed to any other part of the
country, will it not defeat this wise purpose?
The mills on the waters of James river, above the
falls, open to canoe navigation, are very many.
Some of them are of great note, as manufacturers.
The barracks are surrounded by mills. There are
five or six round about Charlottesville. Any
two or three of the whole might, in the course of
the winter, manufacture flour sufficient for the year.
To say the worst, then, of this situation, it is but
twelve miles wrong. The safe custody of these
troops is another circumstance worthy consideration.
Equally removed from the access of an eastern or western
enemy; central to the whole State, so that, should
they attempt an irruption in any direction, they must
pass through a great extent of hostile country; in
a neighborhood thickly inhabited by a robust and hardy
people, zealous in the American cause, acquainted
with the use of arms, and the defiles and passes by
which they must issue: it would seem, that in
this point of view, no place could have been better
chosen.
Their health is also of importance. I would not
endeavor to show that their lives are valuable to
us, because it would suppose a possibility, that humanity
was kicked out of doors in America, and interest only
attended to. The barracks occupy the top and brow
of a very high hill, (you have been untruly told they
were in a bottom.) They are free from fog, have four
springs which seem to be plentiful, one within twenty
yards of the piquet, two within fifty yards, and another
within two hundred and fifty, and they propose to
sink wells within the piquet. Of four thousand
people, it should be expected, according to the ordinary
calculations, that one should die every day. Yet,
in the space of near three months, there have been
but four deaths among them; two infants under three
weeks old, and two others by apoplexy. The officers
tell me, the troops were never before so healthy since
they were embodied.