Life of George Washington, Količina 2G. P. Putnam's sons, 1856 |
Iz vsebine knjige
Zadetki 1–5 od 89
Stran 28
... arms ; there were not much more than fourteen thousand . He had expected to find some degree of system and discipline ; whereas all were raw militia . He had expected to find works scientifically constructed , and proofs of knowledge ...
... arms ; there were not much more than fourteen thousand . He had expected to find some degree of system and discipline ; whereas all were raw militia . He had expected to find works scientifically constructed , and proofs of knowledge ...
Stran 41
... arms ; but of that kind of friendship there was no further manifestation . Gates was certainly of great service , from his practical knowledge and military experience at this juncture , when the whole army had in a manner to be ...
... arms ; but of that kind of friendship there was no further manifestation . Gates was certainly of great service , from his practical knowledge and military experience at this juncture , when the whole army had in a manner to be ...
Stran 45
... arms on the frontier and obtained a command . He and his rifle- men in coming to the camp had marched six hundred miles in three weeks . They will be found of signal effi- ciency in the sharpest conflicts of the Revolutionary War ...
... arms on the frontier and obtained a command . He and his rifle- men in coming to the camp had marched six hundred miles in three weeks . They will be found of signal effi- ciency in the sharpest conflicts of the Revolutionary War ...
Stran 49
... arms and intrenched . We are deprived of fresh provisions , subject to continual alarms and can- nonadings , the provincials being very audacious and ad- vancing to our lines , since the arrival of generals Wash- ington and Lee to ...
... arms and intrenched . We are deprived of fresh provisions , subject to continual alarms and can- nonadings , the provincials being very audacious and ad- vancing to our lines , since the arrival of generals Wash- ington and Lee to ...
Stran 53
... arms in their early days ; but Gage might now affect to look down upon him as the chief of a rebel army . Washington took an early opportunity to let him know , that he claimed to be the commander of a legiti- mate force , engaged in a ...
... arms in their early days ; but Gage might now affect to look down upon him as the chief of a rebel army . Washington took an early opportunity to let him know , that he claimed to be the commander of a legiti- mate force , engaged in a ...
Vsebina
23 | |
36 | |
60 | |
80 | |
101 | |
113 | |
120 | |
139 | |
151 | |
160 | |
167 | |
177 | |
187 | |
201 | |
214 | |
223 | |
241 | |
255 | |
264 | |
271 | |
280 | |
383 | |
404 | |
415 | |
436 | |
445 | |
462 | |
472 | |
482 | |
495 | |
518 | |
538 | |
564 | |
576 | |
Druge izdaje - Prikaži vse
Pogosti izrazi in povedi
5th Series advance affairs alarm Allen American Archives arms army Arnold arrived artillery attack battery boats Boston brigade British camp Canada cannon cannonade Captain Carleton cause Clinton Colonel Colonel Reed command commander-in-chief committee Connecticut crossed defense Delaware detachment embarked encamped enemy enemy's eral Ferry fire force Fort Constitution Fort Montgomery Fort Washington garrison Gates George Clinton Governor Green Mountain Boys Greene guard guns head-quarters Heath Hessians Highlands Hill honor Hudson hundred ington James Clinton Jerseys John's King's Bridge land Lee's letter lieutenant Long Island Lord Stirling ment miles military militia Montgomery Montreal morning night o'clock officers orders pass Peekskill Philadelphia Point present President of Congress prisoners province Putnam quarters Quebec Rahl received regiment reinforced retreat river Schuyler sent Seth Warner ships soldiers soon spirit Staten Island stationed Sullivan thousand Ticonderoga tion tories town Trenton troops Wash Washington writes York