Life of George Washington, Količina 1G. P. Putnam, 1897 |
Iz vsebine knjige
Zadetki 1–5 od 50
Stran 4
... appeared to be good authority , and avoiding as much as possible all false coloring and exaggeration . My work is founded on the correspondence of Washington , which , in fact , affords the amplest and surest groundwork for his ...
... appeared to be good authority , and avoiding as much as possible all false coloring and exaggeration . My work is founded on the correspondence of Washington , which , in fact , affords the amplest and surest groundwork for his ...
Stran 29
... appearing with a train of ecclesiastics and an armed retinue . When Richard Coeur de Lion put every- thing at pawn and sale to raise funds for a crusade to the Holy Land , the bishop resolved to accompany him . More wealthy than his ...
... appearing with a train of ecclesiastics and an armed retinue . When Richard Coeur de Lion put every- thing at pawn and sale to raise funds for a crusade to the Holy Land , the bishop resolved to accompany him . More wealthy than his ...
Stran 31
... appeared , we are told , more like a powerful prince than a priest or prelate . † At the surrender of the crown of Scotland by John Baliol , which ended this invasion , the bishop negotiated on the part of England . As a trophy of the ...
... appeared , we are told , more like a powerful prince than a priest or prelate . † At the surrender of the crown of Scotland by John Baliol , which ended this invasion , the bishop negotiated on the part of England . As a trophy of the ...
Stran 50
... appeared at hand . Ships of war frequented the colonies , and at times , as we have hinted , were anchored in the Potomac . The inclination was encouraged by Lawrence Washington and Mr. Fairfax . Lawrence retained pleasant recollections ...
... appeared at hand . Ships of war frequented the colonies , and at times , as we have hinted , were anchored in the Potomac . The inclination was encouraged by Lawrence Washington and Mr. Fairfax . Lawrence retained pleasant recollections ...
Stran 53
... appearance , he had figured to advantage in London life in his younger days . He had received his education at the University of Oxford , where he acquitted himself with credit . He afterward held a com- mission , and remained for some ...
... appearance , he had figured to advantage in London life in his younger days . He had received his education at the University of Oxford , where he acquitted himself with credit . He afterward held a com- mission , and remained for some ...
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affairs American arms army Arnold arrived artillery attack Boston Braam Braddock British brother Bunker's Hill camp campaign Canada Canadians Captain CHAPTER Colonel colonies command commander-in-chief conduct Congress Connecticut council Creek Croghan Crown Point detachment Duquesne encamped enemy England English Ethan Allen expedition fire force Fort Cumberland Fort Duquesne French friends frontier Gage garrison George George Croghan Gist Governor Dinwiddie Green Mountain Boys half-king honor horses House of Burgesses hundred Indians ington king Lake land Lawrence letter Logstown Lord Loudoun Massachusetts ment miles military militia Montreal Mount Vernon night officers Ohio Parliament party patriot Pennsylvania present prisoners province Putnam Quebec re-enforcements received redoubt regiment reply retreat returned river sachem savages Schuyler sent Seth Warner ships Sir William Johnson soldiers spirit thousand Ticonderoga tion town tribes troops Virginia warriors Wash Washington wilderness William Winchester wounded writes York