... first battalion of the Guards under Colonel Morton; on the left Lieutenant-colonel Webster, with the 23d and 33d regiments, and Brigadier-general O'Hara with the grenadiers and the 2d battalion of the Guards. In the woods on the left of the artillery... The Library of American Biography - 第 185 頁Jared Sparks 著 - 1846完整檢視 - 關於此書
| George Washington Greene - 1871 - 610 頁
...Guards. In the woods on the left of the artillery were the yagers and light infantry of the Guards. The cavalry under Tarleton was ranged in columns on...own artillery ; and the different corps, deploying to the right and left in quick step, were soon ranged in line of battle. For a moment Greene hoped... | |
| Charles Morris - 1887 - 560 頁
...bayonet, and drive his adversary before him by one great effort of combined and compact strength. . . . Watching the intervals of the enemy's fire, Cornwallis...own artillery ; and the different corps, deploying to the right and left in quick step, were soon ranged in line of battle. For a moment Greene hoped... | |
| Charles Morris - 1913 - 434 頁
...bayonet, and drive his adversary before him by one great effort of combined and compact strength. . . . Watching the intervals of the enemy's fire, Cornwallis...own artillery; and the different corps, deploying to the right and left in quick step, were soon ranged in line of battle. For a moment Greene hoped... | |
| Lee P. Anderson - 2002 - 380 頁
...the Guards. In the woods, on the left of the artillery was jagers and light infantry of the Guards. The cavalry under Tarleton was ranged in columns on...instructions to keep compact, and not to charge without getting orders directly from Cornwallis himself, except "in the case of the most evident necessity."... | |
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