Memoir of General Graham: With Notices of the Campaigns in which He was Engaged from 1779 to 1801Priv. print. by R. & R. Clark, 1862 - 318 pages |
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Page vii
... York's campaigns than any he has been able to meet with , he takes this opportunity of noticing that circumstance , as the campaigns of the British army from 1793 to 1795 , although attended with less favourable results than other wars ...
... York's campaigns than any he has been able to meet with , he takes this opportunity of noticing that circumstance , as the campaigns of the British army from 1793 to 1795 , although attended with less favourable results than other wars ...
Page x
... York and Glou- cester occupied by Lord Cornwallis ' army ... Vigorous efforts to fortify the former ... Americans reinforced by the arrival of French troops ... Rapid progress made by the besiegers ... Gallant sortie of the gar- rison ...
... York and Glou- cester occupied by Lord Cornwallis ' army ... Vigorous efforts to fortify the former ... Americans reinforced by the arrival of French troops ... Rapid progress made by the besiegers ... Gallant sortie of the gar- rison ...
Page xi
... York ... Death of Lieutenant Cunningham CHAPTER VII . Warfare between the American royalists and the re- publicans ... Correspondence between General Wash- ington and Sir Henry Clinton and Sir Guy Carleton relative to the execution of ...
... York ... Death of Lieutenant Cunningham CHAPTER VII . Warfare between the American royalists and the re- publicans ... Correspondence between General Wash- ington and Sir Henry Clinton and Sir Guy Carleton relative to the execution of ...
Page xiii
... York at Famars ... Is recommended to Colonel Calvert , the officer in charge of the secret intelligence department ... Result of his first mission ... Critical position ... Taken prisoner by the French ... Their inhuman treatment ...
... York at Famars ... Is recommended to Colonel Calvert , the officer in charge of the secret intelligence department ... Result of his first mission ... Critical position ... Taken prisoner by the French ... Their inhuman treatment ...
Page xiv
... York returns to England ... Count Walmoden succeeds His Royal Highness ... The enemy pass the Waal on the ice and surprise the Dutch ... Are driven back again by Major - Gene- ral Dundas ... The severe frost and hardships of the troops ...
... York returns to England ... Count Walmoden succeeds His Royal Highness ... The enemy pass the Waal on the ice and surprise the Dutch ... Are driven back again by Major - Gene- ral Dundas ... The severe frost and hardships of the troops ...
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Memoir of General Graham: With Notices of the Campaigns in Which He Was ... Samuel Graham,Col J J Graham No preview available - 2016 |
Common terms and phrases
76th Regiment Abercromby America amongst arms arrived artillery assembled attack Austrian battalion batteries BONNYMUIR bread and forage brigade Brigadier-General British army camp Captain Asgill Caribs cavalry Cherin Clairfayt Clinton Colonarie Colonel Graham column command Commander-in-Chief conduct Contich corps Custine despatch detachment dragoons Duke of York Dundas duty Earl Cornwallis embarked enemy enemy's England Excellency favour Ferrier fire flank fleet force French Guards Hanoverian HEAD QUARTERS Hessian Highlanders honour Huddy immediately infantry island July King land letter Lieutenant Lieutenant-Colonel Lieutenant-General Lord Cornwallis Lord Moira Lord Rawdon lordship M'Millan Major Gordon Major-General ment miles moved non-commissioned officer o'clock obliged occasion officer orders Ostend Oudenbosch party position prisoners quarter-master quarter-master-general's Queen's Rangers rear received retreat river Rosendal Royal Highness sent siege Sir-I soldiers soon Stirling Castle taken tion to-morrow morning took troops Waerloos waggons Walmoden Washington wounded York Town
Popular passages
Page 84 - River ; and in consequence I have written to the British Commander-in-chief, that, unless the perpetrators of that horrid deed were delivered up, I should be under the disagreeable necessity of retaliating, as the only means left to put a stop to such inhuman proceedings. You will, therefore, immediately on receipt of this, designate by lot for the above purpose, a British captain, who is an unconditional prisoner, if such a one is in our possession ; if not, a lieutenant under the same circumstances...
Page 27 - I take the liberty to mention the condition of some gentlemen at Charleston, who being either on parole or under protection were engaged in a conspiracy against us. Though their situation is not similar, they are objects who may be set in exchange for me, or are persons whom the treatment I receive might affect.
Page 100 - Sir, which, though it is not decisive, may have an influence on your resolution. Captain Asgill is doubtless your prisoner, but he is among those whom the arms of the King contributed to put into your hands at Yorktown. Although this circumstance does not operate as a safeguard, it however justifies the interest I permit myself to take in this affair.
Page 76 - Huddy, must be given up ; or, if that officer was of inferior rank to him, so many of the perpetrators as will, according to the tariff of exchange, be an equivalent. To do this, will mark the justice of your Excellency's character. In failure of it, I shall hold myself justifiable, in the eyes of God and man, for the measure to which I shall resort.
Page 97 - I cannot take leave of you, sir, without assuring you, that, in whatever light my agency in this unpleasant affair may be viewed, I was never influenced, through the whole of it, by sanguinary motives, but by what I conceived to be a sense of my duty, which loudly called upon me to take measures, however disagreeable, to prevent a repetition of those enormities which have been the subject of discussion. And that this important end is likely to be answered, without the effusion of the blood of an...
Page 271 - I have no dearer aim than to have it in my power, unplagued with the routine of business, for which Heaven knows I am unfit enough, to make leisurely pilgrimages through Caledonia; to sit on the fields of her battles; to wander on the romantic banks of her rivers; and to muse by the stately towers or venerable ruins, once the honoured abodes of her heroes.
Page 99 - Queen, to whom I communicated it. The goodness of their Majesties' hearts induces them to desire, that the inquietudes of an unfortunate mother may be calmed, and...
Page 100 - ... unfortunate people. In seeking to deliver Mr. Asgill from the fate which threatens him, I am far from engaging you to secure another victim ; the pardon, to be perfectly satisfactory, must be entire. I do not imagine it can be productive of any bad consequences. If the English general has not been able to punish the horrible crime you complain of, in so exemplary a manner as he should, there is reason to think he will take the most efficacious measures to prevent the like in future. I sincerely...
Page 88 - Be it known to all nations that the Falkland Islands, with this fort, the storehouses, wharfs, harbors, bays, and creeks thereunto belonging are the sole right and property of His Most Sacred Majesty George the Third, King of Great Britain, France and Ireland, Defender of the Faith, etc. In witness whereof this plate is set up, and his Britannic Majesty's colors left flying as a mark of possession by SW Clayton, commanding officer at Falkland Islands, AD 1774.
Page 85 - So soon as you have fixed on the person, you will send him under a safeguard to Philadelphia, where the minister of war will order a proper guard to receive and conduct him to the place of his destination. For your information respecting the officers, who are prisoners in our possession, I have ordered the commissary of prisoners to furnish you with a list of them. It will be forwarded with this. I need not mention to you, that every possible tenderness, that is consistent with the security of him,...