Works, Volumen22Putnam, 1909 |
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Página 50
... American officers , who had fallen into their hands . The British soldiery treated them with insolent scurrility . It seemed as if the very ties of consanguinity rendered their hostility more intolerant , for it was observed that American ...
... American officers , who had fallen into their hands . The British soldiery treated them with insolent scurrility . It seemed as if the very ties of consanguinity rendered their hostility more intolerant , for it was observed that American ...
Página 274
... Americans , and draw their attention in that direction , while he and Fraser , making a circuit through the woods , should join forces and fall upon the rear of the American camp . As the dense forests hid them from each other , signal ...
... Americans , and draw their attention in that direction , while he and Fraser , making a circuit through the woods , should join forces and fall upon the rear of the American camp . As the dense forests hid them from each other , signal ...
Página 279
... American captives , and were laying siege to Fort Independence . * Fortunately for Burgoyne , while affairs were darkening in the North , a ray of hope dawned from the South . While the shouts from the American camp were yet ring- ing ...
... American captives , and were laying siege to Fort Independence . * Fortunately for Burgoyne , while affairs were darkening in the North , a ray of hope dawned from the South . While the shouts from the American camp were yet ring- ing ...
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Términos y frases comunes
affairs aide-de-camp Albany American arms army Arnold arrived artillery attack batteries battle brigade British Burgoyne camp campaign cannon Clair Colonel command commander-in-chief conduct Congress Conway coöperate Count D'Estaing Creek Delaware detachment division encamped endeavored enemy enemy's eral expedition fire flank fleet force Fort Edward Fort Mercer Fort Mifflin Fort Montgomery forts French garrison Gates give Governor Greene head-quarters Hessian Highlands Hill honor horse Hudson hundred Indians ington Island Jerseys Lafayette land letter Lord Stirling main body major-general marquis ment Mifflin miles military militia Mohawk River morning movement night Northern department officers parties Peekskill Philadelphia prisoners Putnam quarters rear received reconnoitering regiment reinforcements reply retreat river road Schuyler sent ships side Sir Henry Clinton Skenesborough soldiers soon spirit Stony Point Sullivan thousand Ticonderoga tion troops Tryon County Wash Washington Wayne whole Wilkinson woods wounded writes York