Works, Volumen25G.P. Putnam's Sons |
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Página 29
... hundred men preceded the carts with the intrenching tools ; then came General Thomas with the working party , twelve hundred strong , fol- lowed by a train of three hundred wagons , laden with fascines , gabions , and hay screwed into ...
... hundred men preceded the carts with the intrenching tools ; then came General Thomas with the working party , twelve hundred strong , fol- lowed by a train of three hundred wagons , laden with fascines , gabions , and hay screwed into ...
Página 89
... hundred feet high . The river at that place was about half a mile wide . Opposite the fort was the promontory of Anthony's Nose , many hundred feet high , accessible only to goats , or men expert in climbing . A body of riflemen ...
... hundred feet high . The river at that place was about half a mile wide . Opposite the fort was the promontory of Anthony's Nose , many hundred feet high , accessible only to goats , or men expert in climbing . A body of riflemen ...
Página 201
... hundred yards . General Grant , likewise , brought up his artillery within three hundred yards , and formed his brigade on opposite hills , about six hundred yards distant . There was occasional cannonading on both sides , but neither ...
... hundred yards . General Grant , likewise , brought up his artillery within three hundred yards , and formed his brigade on opposite hills , about six hundred yards distant . There was occasional cannonading on both sides , but neither ...
Contenido
Correspondence of Washington | 1 |
Monotonous State of Affairs before | 16 |
The Affair of Dorchester Heights | 26 |
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Términos y frases comunes
5th Series adjutant-general affairs aide-de-camp alarm American Archives arms army arrived artillery attack battalions batteries Battle of Long boats Boston brave brigade British Brooklyn Canada cannon cannonade Colonel Colonel Reed command crossed defense Delaware detachment Dorchester embarked encamped enemy enemy's eral ferry fire Flatbush fleet force Fort Constitution Fort Lee Fort Montgomery Fort Washington fortified garrison Gates George Clinton guard guns Harlem Harlem River Heath heights Hessians Highlands Hill horse Hudson hundred ington James Clinton Jerseys King's Bridge land Lee's letter lines Long Island Lord Stirling ment Mifflin miles military militia morning night o'clock officers orders pass Peekskill Philadelphia Point President of Congress prisoners Putnam quarters Rahl redoubts regiment reinforced riflemen river Schuyler sent ships shore Sir Henry Clinton soldiers soon spirit Staten Island stationed Sullivan Sullivan's Island thousand tion tories town Trenton troops Tryon Washing Washington writes York