Jim Swike

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His Volunteers had little food and no feed for their horses. With expected supply shipments delayed, Jackson saw that his starving troops were growing more restless by the day. He realized that, despite the victory at Talladega less than a month before, his army was about to come apart at the seams—and if his Volunteers deserted, he would be able to fight neither Indians nor the British.
Andrew Jackson and the Miracle of New Orleans: The Battle That Shaped America's Destiny
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