History of the United States: From the Earliest Period to the Administration of President Johnson, 第 2 卷Johnson, Fry, 1866 |
搜尋書籍內容
第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 79 筆
第 73 頁
... arms during the siege , were to be prisoners of war ; the garrison were to march out of the town , and lay down their arms in front of the works , but their drums were not to beat a British march , and their colors were not to be ...
... arms during the siege , were to be prisoners of war ; the garrison were to march out of the town , and lay down their arms in front of the works , but their drums were not to beat a British march , and their colors were not to be ...
第 79 頁
... arms : his sick and magazines must be left behind ; and the whole of the two provinces , except Charleston and Savannah , aban- doned . The consequences of such a movement would be nearly as fatal as a defeat . Cornwallis , therefore ...
... arms : his sick and magazines must be left behind ; and the whole of the two provinces , except Charleston and Savannah , aban- doned . The consequences of such a movement would be nearly as fatal as a defeat . Cornwallis , therefore ...
第 212 頁
... arms , in order to force the state to comply with its demands . Minot , the historian of the Insurrection , states , that in the month of December , in the counties of Worcester and Hampshire , some fifteen hundred men were em- bodied ...
... arms , in order to force the state to comply with its demands . Minot , the historian of the Insurrection , states , that in the month of December , in the counties of Worcester and Hampshire , some fifteen hundred men were em- bodied ...
其他版本 - 查看全部
常見字詞
Adams adopted American André appointed arms army Arnold arrived Articles of Confederation attack bills Britain British British army Champe Charleston citizens Clinton Colonel command commander-in-chief Congress Constitution Convention Cornwallis Count D'Estaing court debt declared defence detachment duty enemy England eral executive favor federal fleet force France French garrison Georgia Greene gress honor House hundred interest Island James River Jefferson John Adams justice Lafayette land laws legislature letter liberty Lord Cornwallis Lord Rawdon Major marched measures ment military militia minister nation North officers opinion party passed patriotism peace person present president prisoners Rawdon received resolutions resolved respect retire retreat Rhode Island river Savannah Senate sent ships Sir Henry Clinton soldiers South Carolina spirit Tarleton thing thousand tion tories treaty troops Union United vessels Virginia vote Washington whole wounded York