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Image from Chicago

Is this sculpture from the DuSable Bridge a depiction of William Wells? It depicts the Battle of Fort Dearborn and shows a US captain defending the US retreat from native forces. Also, the inscription below mentions Wells by name. I'm trying to find a source that explicitly names Wells as the subject of this sculpture, but I haven't found one, yet.

I would guess the sculpture depicts Nathan Heald, since Wells was said to have been dressed as a Miami, but either way it would be interesting to know the answer. Kevin1776 ( talk) 21:12, 28 November 2021 (UTC) reply
As you may know, the DuSable Bridge article claims the figure represents George Ronan, though the claim is not supported by a citation. Kevin1776 ( talk) 01:30, 29 November 2021 (UTC) reply
No, I completely missed that line in the DuSable Bridge article. Thanks for pointing that out. I didn't think Ensigns and Lieutenants wore two epaulettes, but I'd have to look that up to verify. Either way, you're correct that Wells was apparently not in uniform. Thanks! Canute ( talk) 18:21, 29 November 2021 (UTC) reply

Susannah Dyson

I removed the following addition to the article. Ancestry.com is not a reliable source. Also, I went through the Heath book (2015) and found no mention of Susannah Dyson nor Henry Wells. From what I can tell, Wells had a Native American wife with one son (both kidnapped by U.S.), a second wife (daughter of Little Turtle), and then a third wife, Mary "Polly" Geiger, to whom he was still married when he died in 1812.

Wells married Susannah Dyson and had at least 1 child Charles, Henry Wells (1841-1881) who emigrated to England. (Source Ancestry.com)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Image from Chicago

Is this sculpture from the DuSable Bridge a depiction of William Wells? It depicts the Battle of Fort Dearborn and shows a US captain defending the US retreat from native forces. Also, the inscription below mentions Wells by name. I'm trying to find a source that explicitly names Wells as the subject of this sculpture, but I haven't found one, yet.

I would guess the sculpture depicts Nathan Heald, since Wells was said to have been dressed as a Miami, but either way it would be interesting to know the answer. Kevin1776 ( talk) 21:12, 28 November 2021 (UTC) reply
As you may know, the DuSable Bridge article claims the figure represents George Ronan, though the claim is not supported by a citation. Kevin1776 ( talk) 01:30, 29 November 2021 (UTC) reply
No, I completely missed that line in the DuSable Bridge article. Thanks for pointing that out. I didn't think Ensigns and Lieutenants wore two epaulettes, but I'd have to look that up to verify. Either way, you're correct that Wells was apparently not in uniform. Thanks! Canute ( talk) 18:21, 29 November 2021 (UTC) reply

Susannah Dyson

I removed the following addition to the article. Ancestry.com is not a reliable source. Also, I went through the Heath book (2015) and found no mention of Susannah Dyson nor Henry Wells. From what I can tell, Wells had a Native American wife with one son (both kidnapped by U.S.), a second wife (daughter of Little Turtle), and then a third wife, Mary "Polly" Geiger, to whom he was still married when he died in 1812.

Wells married Susannah Dyson and had at least 1 child Charles, Henry Wells (1841-1881) who emigrated to England. (Source Ancestry.com)


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