Select British Documents of the Canadian War of 1812, 13. köideChamplain Society, 1920 - 551 pages |
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Page 10
... regulars , who themselves became almost as seasoned as the Imperial Army . Pay , pensions , bounties , and land grants were all adjusted to the circumstances , as well as the resources available would permit . The land grants are ...
... regulars , who themselves became almost as seasoned as the Imperial Army . Pay , pensions , bounties , and land grants were all adjusted to the circumstances , as well as the resources available would permit . The land grants are ...
Page 11
... regulars , less than 4000 were Canadian regulars , most of whom had been specially raised for the occasion , and about 4000 more were " embodied " or " incorporated " militia , who had been partly trained already and who were under the ...
... regulars , less than 4000 were Canadian regulars , most of whom had been specially raised for the occasion , and about 4000 more were " embodied " or " incorporated " militia , who had been partly trained already and who were under the ...
Page 12
... regulars to the worst of irregulars . Yet out of all this vast total of more than half a million no American general ever had ten thousand men fit for action at any one time and place . The Americans fought exceedingly well on many ...
... regulars to the worst of irregulars . Yet out of all this vast total of more than half a million no American general ever had ten thousand men fit for action at any one time and place . The Americans fought exceedingly well on many ...
Page 17
... regular reading was mainly military , or what might be called " in- telligence " work - work , that is , which contributes to an exact knowledge of whatever may be turned to advantage in a campaign . But his Shakespeare bore marks of ...
... regular reading was mainly military , or what might be called " in- telligence " work - work , that is , which contributes to an exact knowledge of whatever may be turned to advantage in a campaign . But his Shakespeare bore marks of ...
Page 28
... regulars . Colonel St. George held Fort Malden and Amherstburg , both exceedingly weak . If Hull had only pressed home his attack he must have succeeded . But he sent out raiding and requisition parties , some eastwards up the Thames ...
... regulars . Colonel St. George held Fort Malden and Amherstburg , both exceedingly weak . If Hull had only pressed home his attack he must have succeeded . But he sent out raiding and requisition parties , some eastwards up the Thames ...
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Select British Documents of the Canadian War of 1812 William Charles Henry Wood No preview available - 2018 |
Common terms and phrases
action advance aforesaid American Amherstburg Archives Arms Army Bills arrived Artillery attack August Battalion battery battle Baynes boats Brigade British Canadian Capt Captain Châteauguay Chippawa Colonel command Corps Creek defence Detachment Detroit effect Embodied Militia enemy Excellency Excellency's fighting fire flank companies force Fort Amherstburg Fort Erie Fort George Fort Niagara French-Canadian frontier Garrison Government Governor guns Henry Procter honor Hull Humble Servant immediately Indians Isaac Brock Island July Kingston Lake Erie Lake Ontario land letter Lieut Lieutenant Lower Canada Macdonell Majesty Majesty's Major General Brock ment Michillimackinac miles military Montreal morning Niagara o'clock Officers party person prisoners Proclamation Procter Province quarter Quebec Queenston received Regiment Regt regulars reinforcements Rensselaer River Royal Sackett's Harbour Salaberry Sandwich Select Embodied Militia sent Sheaffe side Solomon van Rensselaer soon surrender taken took troops United Upper Canada vessels wounded York
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