The Major Operations of the Navies in the War of American IndependenceLittle, Brown,, 1913 - 280페이지 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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xiv 페이지
... Windward Islands 147 De Guichen Accompanies them to Haïti with his Fleet He declines to Coöperate on the Continent with the Americans , and sails for Europe . 147 · 148 Rodney Arranges for the protection of the Homeward West India Trade ...
... Windward Islands 147 De Guichen Accompanies them to Haïti with his Fleet He declines to Coöperate on the Continent with the Americans , and sails for Europe . 147 · 148 Rodney Arranges for the protection of the Homeward West India Trade ...
22 페이지
... windward ; but to make sail seems to have been impossible . Two artillery boats were sent to her assistance , " which towed her off through a very thick fire , until out of farther reach , much to the honour of Mr. John Curling and Mr ...
... windward ; but to make sail seems to have been impossible . Two artillery boats were sent to her assistance , " which towed her off through a very thick fire , until out of farther reach , much to the honour of Mr. John Curling and Mr ...
24 페이지
... windward , with the cool judgment that had marked all his conduct , so that the enemy could not follow him except in small boats with which he could deal . There he set his vessels on fire , and stood by them 1 Beatson , " Nav . and Mil ...
... windward , with the cool judgment that had marked all his conduct , so that the enemy could not follow him except in small boats with which he could deal . There he set his vessels on fire , and stood by them 1 Beatson , " Nav . and Mil ...
68 페이지
... windward , as if to gain a proper position for crossing the bar by the time the tide should serve . The wind could not be more favourable for such a design ; it blew from the exact point from which he could attack us to the greatest ...
... windward , as if to gain a proper position for crossing the bar by the time the tide should serve . The wind could not be more favourable for such a design ; it blew from the exact point from which he could attack us to the greatest ...
74 페이지
... windward , at 4 P.M. the French bore south - south - east , which would be somewhat on the port quarter , or nearly astern but to leeward . At this time their van was estimated by Howe to be two or three miles from the British rear ...
... windward , at 4 P.M. the French bore south - south - east , which would be somewhat on the port quarter , or nearly astern but to leeward . At this time their van was estimated by Howe to be two or three miles from the British rear ...
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자주 나오는 단어 및 구문
abreast action Admiralty ahead American anchored army Arnold arrived astern attack Barbados Barrington batteries Brest broadside Burgoyne Byron campaign Captain Carleton centre channel chase Chesapeake Clinton close coast command Commander-in-Chief convoy Cornwallis Crown Point d'Estaing d'Orvilliers Delaware division east enemy enemy's engagement fight fire flagship flotilla force Fort Mifflin Fort Moultrie French admiral French fleet French ships frigates galleys garrison Gibraltar gondolas Guichen guns Hood Howe's Hudson July Keppel killed Lake Champlain land latter leeward line of battle Lord Martinique miles military morning movement Narragansett Bay naval Navy night operations Palliser Palliser's passed port tack position put to sea rear Rear-Admiral retreat Rhode Island River Rodney Rodney's sail Sandy Hook Santa Lucia schooners shore signal Sir Peter Parker southward starboard tack station Suffren superior thousand Ticonderoga tion troops Valcour vessels Washington weather West Indies wind windward wounded wrote York
인기 인용구
52 페이지 - General Howe's in a manner abandoning General Burgoyne, is so unaccountable a matter, that, till I am fully assured it is so, I cannot help casting my eyes continually behind me.
1 페이지 - Prussia was unknown ; and, in order that he might rob a neighbour whom he had promised to defend, black men fought on the coast of Coromandel, and red men scalped each other by the Great Lakes of North America...
1 페이지 - On the head of Frederic is all the blood which was shed in a war which raged during many years and in every quarter of the globe, the blood of the column of Fontenoy, the blood of the mountaineers who were slaughtered at Culloden.
222 페이지 - I, my dear friend, have had the honour of commanding his Majesty's noble fleet on the 12th, I may, without the imputation of much vanity, say the flag of England should now have graced the sterns of upwards of twenty sail of the enemy's ships of the line.
134 페이지 - Sandwich for an hour and a half, bore away. " The superiority of the fire from the Sandwich, and the gallant behaviour of her officers and men, enabled her to sustain so unequal a combat, though, before attacked by them, she had beat three ships out of their line of battle, had entirely broke it, and was to leeward of the wake of the French admiral.
159 페이지 - The whole Face of the Country appears an entire ruin, and the most Beautiful Island in the World has the appearance of a Country laid waste by Fire, and Sword, and appears to the Imagination more Dreadful than it is possible for me to find Words to express.
11 페이지 - We now," he says in his despatch to Mr. Stephens, * thought it an enterprise worthy of an English ship of the line in our King and Country's sacred cause, and an effort due to the gallant defence of {Quebec, to make the attempt of pressing her by force of sail through the thick, broad, and closely connected fields of ice (as formidable as the Gulf of St. Lawrence ever exhibited), to which we saw no bounds.
136 페이지 - ... that glorious opportunity (perhaps never to be recovered) of terminating the naval contest in these seas. 'I cannot conclude without taking notice of my having, in justice to the...
7 페이지 - That the Americans were strong enough to impose the capitulation of Saratoga was due to the invaluable year of delay, secured to them in 1776 by their little navy on Lake Champlain, created by the indomitable energy, and handled with the indomitable courage of the traitor, Benedict Arnold.
223 페이지 - ... best-sailing ships or frigates to have shown lights at times, and by changing their course, have induced the British fleet to have followed them, while the main of their fleet, by hiding their lights, might have hauled their wind, and have been far to windward before daylight, and intercepted the captured ships, and the most crippled ships of the English...