Life of George Washington, Količina 1G. P. Putnam, 1897 |
Iz vsebine knjige
Zadetki 1–5 od 93
Stran 40
... miles of the Potomac and the opposite shore of Maryland . It had probably been purchased with the prop- erty , and was one of the primitive farmhouses of Virginia . The roof was steep , and sloped down into low 40 Works of Washington ...
... miles of the Potomac and the opposite shore of Maryland . It had probably been purchased with the prop- erty , and was one of the primitive farmhouses of Virginia . The roof was steep , and sloped down into low 40 Works of Washington ...
Stran 49
... miles below Mount Vernon , and on the same woody ridge bordering the Potomac . William Fairfax was a man of liberal education and in- trinsic worth ; he had seen much of the world , and his mind had been enriched and ripened by varied ...
... miles below Mount Vernon , and on the same woody ridge bordering the Potomac . William Fairfax was a man of liberal education and in- trinsic worth ; he had seen much of the world , and his mind had been enriched and ripened by varied ...
Stran 58
... miles wide ; a lovely and temperate region , diversified by gentle swells and slopes , admirably adapted to cultivation . The Blue Ridge bounds it on one side , the North Mountain , a ridge of the Alleghanies , on the other ; while ...
... miles wide ; a lovely and temperate region , diversified by gentle swells and slopes , admirably adapted to cultivation . The Blue Ridge bounds it on one side , the North Mountain , a ridge of the Alleghanies , on the other ; while ...
Stran 59
... miles from the site of the present town of Winchester . 99 In a diary kept with his usual minuteness , Washington speaks with delight of the beauty of the trees and the rich- ness of the land in the neighborhood , and of his riding ...
... miles from the site of the present town of Winchester . 99 In a diary kept with his usual minuteness , Washington speaks with delight of the beauty of the trees and the rich- ness of the land in the neighborhood , and of his riding ...
Stran 60
... miles up the left side of the river , in a continual rain , and over what Washington pronounces the worst road ever trod by man or beast , brought them to the house of a Colonel Cresap , Irving , Vol . Twelve , p . 59 . 60 Works of ...
... miles up the left side of the river , in a continual rain , and over what Washington pronounces the worst road ever trod by man or beast , brought them to the house of a Colonel Cresap , Irving , Vol . Twelve , p . 59 . 60 Works of ...
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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