The Major Operations of the Navies in the War of American IndependenceLittle, Brown,, 1913 - 280ÆäÀÌÁö The author states in his introduction that his aim in issuing this volume is "to bring home to American readers the vast extent of the struggle to which our own declaration of independence was but the prelude...." |
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11 ÆäÀÌÁö
... steering . The urgency of the case not admitting delay , he ran his ship , the Isis , 50 , with a speed of five knots , against a large piece of ice about ten or twelve feet thick , to test the effect . The ice , probably softened by ...
... steering . The urgency of the case not admitting delay , he ran his ship , the Isis , 50 , with a speed of five knots , against a large piece of ice about ten or twelve feet thick , to test the effect . The ice , probably softened by ...
71 ÆäÀÌÁö
... steering for Rhode Island . The Renown , 50 , which on the 26th had reached New York from the West Indies , had a similar close shave , having sailed unnoticed through the rear of the enemy the night before . Besides these two , Howe ...
... steering for Rhode Island . The Renown , 50 , which on the 26th had reached New York from the West Indies , had a similar close shave , having sailed unnoticed through the rear of the enemy the night before . Besides these two , Howe ...
73 ÆäÀÌÁö
... steering for the enemy . Howe , of course , retired at once ; his in- feriority1 did not permit an engagement except on his own terms . To insure these , he needed the weather - gage , the offensive position of that day , which by ...
... steering for the enemy . Howe , of course , retired at once ; his in- feriority1 did not permit an engagement except on his own terms . To insure these , he needed the weather - gage , the offensive position of that day , which by ...
74 ÆäÀÌÁö
... steering to the southward , on the port tack , the French five or six miles in the rear of the British , with the wind variable at east . The same course was maintained throughout the night , the French gradually overhauling the British ...
... steering to the southward , on the port tack , the French five or six miles in the rear of the British , with the wind variable at east . The same course was maintained throughout the night , the French gradually overhauling the British ...
84 ÆäÀÌÁö
... steering north - west ; the French dead to windward , in line ahead . The British were in bow - and- quarter line . In this formation , when exact , the ships of a fleet were nearly abreast each other ; so ranged , however , that if ...
... steering north - west ; the French dead to windward , in line ahead . The British were in bow - and- quarter line . In this formation , when exact , the ships of a fleet were nearly abreast each other ; so ranged , however , that if ...
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abreast action Admiralty ahead American anchored April army Arnold arrived astern attack Barbados batteries Brest British fleet broadsides Burgoyne Byron campaign Cap François Captain centre Channel chase Chesapeake Clinton close coast command Commander-in-Chief convoy Cornwallis course cruise d'Estaing d'Orvilliers division east enemy enemy's engaged fight fire flagship force Fort Mifflin French admiral French fleet French ships frigates galleys garrison Gibraltar Grasse Guadeloupe Guichen guns hauled Hood Hood's Howe's Hyde Parker July Keppel killed Lake Champlain land latter leeward line of battle Lord Martinique miles movement Narragansett Bay naval Navy Palliser Palliser's Parker passed port tack position put to sea Rear-Admiral retreat Rhode Island River Rodney Rodney's sail Sandy Hook Santa Lucia shore signal Sir Peter Parker southward squadron starboard tack station steering Suffren thousand tion Trincomalee troops vessels Vice-Admiral weather West Indies wind windward wounded wrote York