On June 30, 1794, the Battle of Fort Recovery, Ohio took place. From the article:
"Fort Recovery - Ohio History Central
In December 1793, General Anthony Wayne ordered one United States artillery unit and eight infantry companies to the site of St. Clair's Defeat. The soldiers were to construct a fort on the former battlefield. Wayne intended to use this fort as a staging area for his assault against Ohio American Indians the spring of 1794. He named the stockade Fort Recovery. Wayne spent the remainder of the winter increasing the number of soldiers at the fort. The Shawnee, the Miami, and the Delaware all feared the presence of the Americans and sent representatives to Fort Recovery to ask for peace. Wayne demanded that all American Indian chiefs in the surrounding area attend a peace conference and that the American Indians return any white captives that they currently held. The American Indians refused and prepared to isolate Fort Recovery from other American outposts by attacking the garrison's supply lines. They would starve the Americans, forcing them to abandon the fort.
On June 30, 1794, a combined force of 1,500 Shawnee, Delaware, Ottawa, Miami, and Ojibwa attacked a pack train returning from Fort Recovery to Fort Greene Ville. Little Turtle, Blue Jacket, and Simon Girty led the assault. The attack was made less than one thousand feet from Fort Recovery. Of the 140 American soldiers escorting the wagons, the American Indian forces killed or wounded fifteen. They also seized three hundred horses. American Indian casualties amounted to three dead warriors. Soon after this attack, the American Indians, emboldened by their earlier success, launched a night attack against Fort Recovery. The 250 American soldiers succeeded in defending the fort but lost twenty-two men. The American Indians suffered forty dead and twenty wounded.
Wayne continued to use Fort Recovery in his operations against American Indians in the Ohio territory. Following the Battle of Fallen Timbers in August 1794, most of Ohio's American Indians realized they had little chance in stopping white settlement of their lands. In August 1795, many American Indians agreed to sign the Treaty of Greenville. They gave up all claims to land south and east of a line that extended south from Lake Erie, along the Cuyahoga River, to the Tuscarawas River, and then to Fort Laurens. From Fort Laurens, the line ran west to Fort Loramie, then northwest to Fort Recovery, and then straight south to the Ohio River. Anthony Wayne had secured from the American Indians the majority of modern-day Ohio with the exception of the northwestern corner of the state.
The city of Fort Recovery, Ohio, stands today on the site of the frontier fort."