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encouragement to all such persons who are willing to enter into the service of their country; and our Provincial Congress at their last meeting having taken the same under consideration, and being willing and ready to promote the welfare of every friend to the American cause, have thought fit to resolve, "That all persons inlisting in the service of this Province, who do faithfully serve in the present contest until a peace shall be concluded with Great Britain, or shall serve three years in the present war, shall be entitled to one hundred acres of land in this Province; and should any of the aforesaid men be killed in defence of this Province, his wife or family shall be entitled to the same:" I do therefore issue this my Proclamation, declaring that every man who shall inlist in any of the Troops of Horse, or Companies of Foot, raised for the defence of this Province, and shall serve agreeable to the terms above mentioned, shall be entitled to a grant of one hundred acres of land as aforesaid; and in case of accident, his wife and family shall receive and enjoy the same emolument. JOHN PAGE, PRESIDENT OF VIRGINIA COUNCIL, TO GENERAL LEE. Williamsburgh, July 12, 1776. MY DEAR GENERAL: Your kind concern for my health made me happy, and the high approbation you express of my publick conduct highly gratified my pride. I had the pleasure of receiving your letter, which did me so much honour, about the 9th of last month. I was then at Mr. Harrison's, near Petersburgh, where I had gone with Mrs. Page for the recovery of her health. Our trip happily has answered our wishes, and we are once more fixed at Williamsburgh. It is now four weeks since we have received any certain account of the situation of affairs in either of the Carolinas. Even your letter to Brigadier Lewis, countermanding the march of the troops, did not arrive here till four weeks after it was written. The regiments had just begun their march; but had they not been scattered abroad on distant stations, and badly provided with necessaries for such an expedition, they would have reached the place of their destination before your express could have stopped them. It will be worth your while to examine into the occasion of this. I thought it a matter of so much importance to have such orders communicated with despatch, that I advised the Brigadier to send an express to you immediately, to inform you of the unaccountable delay that yours had met with, and to recommend it to you to establish a post throughout your district; but he was preparing for an expedition against Gwin's Island. The Brigadier set out last Monday on his way to our camp, attended by the Colonels Woodford, Stephens, Bucknor, Weedon, and some others, intending to examine into the strength of the enemy, and submit the propriety of an attack to a council of war. They reached the camp that night, and the next day, finding that the Dunmore had changed stations with the other, and had exposed herself very prettily to the very place where we had been preparing a battery for the Otter, they determined not to lose this good opportunity of beginning their cannonade, in which they might severely and principally chastise the noble Earl. At eight o'clock, A. M., Captain Arundel and Lieutenant Denny saluted the Dunmore and Otter with two eighteen-pounders; the very first shot at the Otter, though a full mile from our battery, struck her, as it is supposed, between wind and water, for she did not return the fire, but was towed off on the careen. The Dunmore fired a broadside, and then was towed off, having received four shot through her sides. Whilst she was in tow she received a fifth through her stern, which raked her. Scarcely a shot was fired which did not do execution in some part of the fleet. A schooner lost one of her masts. Whilst Lieutenant Denny was firing on the fleet, their battery on the Island began to play on him, and a ball passed through the embrasure; on which he immediately turned his cannon on their battery, (for he had taken the precaution to have scope enough to take in the fleet, and that part of their battery,) and fired three times successively into their embrasure, which three rounds completely silenced that part of the battery; the other part, facing our lines on the haven, was almost as soon silenced by our battery erected against it with four nines and three six-pounders. Part of their camp was a little exposed to both of our batteries, which fired a few rounds into it. This fire was as well directed as that against their ships, for it beat down many of their tents, and threw their camp into the utmost confusion. When this was discovered, the Brigadier ordered canoes to be brought down to enable, the men to pass over into the Island; for, unhappily, we had not a boat on the shore: these could not be procured till the next day, when a smart cannonade began between the batteries; but as soon as our men had manned their boats, their fire ceased, and they retired with precipitation to their boats, and escaped safely to their ships, having first broken off the trunnions, &c., of their cannon. There were three tenders up the haven, which could not pass our batteries; these they abandoned; they endeavoured to burn one, but our men boarded it, and extinguished the flames. I understand that all these tenders have their swivels in them; but it is reported that they had thrown the guns overboard. We are now in possession of the Island. The fleet has retired, but is in sight. This might have been a complete affair, if proper measures had been preconcerted, and the whole well conducted. Our men, however, behaved well; our artillery was admirably served, and we have disgraced and mortified our enemies. In this affair we lost not a man; but, most unhappily, poor Captain Arundel was killed by the bursting of a wooden mortar, with which he was endeavouring to throw shells into the fleet. His loss is irreparable. He behaved with great spirit and activity, and was so hearty in our cause, that he is universally lamented.
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