The Marquis De La Fayette in the American Revolution. With Some Account of the Attitude of France Toward the War of Independence 1
The Marquis De La Fayette in the American Revolution. With Some Account of the Attitude of France Toward the War of Independence 1
Charlemagne Tower
The book The Marquis De La Fayette in the American Revolution. With Some Account of the Attitude of France Toward the War of Independence 1 was written by author Charlemagne Tower Here you can read free online of The Marquis De La Fayette in the American Revolution. With Some Account of the Attitude of France Toward the War of Independence 1 book, rate and share your impressions in comments. If you don't know what to write, just answer the question: Why is The Marquis De La Fayette in the American Revolution. With Some Account of the Attitude of France Toward the War of Independence 1 a good or bad book?
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"John Suluvan." At that moment the American army was virtually de- feated ; though it made during the next few hours a gal- lant resistance. Its stubborn attempt to retrieve its lost fortune resulted, at all events, in a retreat with compara- tively small loss in killed and wounded, and with strength enough left to continue the campaign. If the British movement had been carried out to completion. General Washington's forces must have been utterly destroyed. The column under Lord Comwallis had m...ade a long d^ tour by the Great Valley Boad to Trimble's Ford, thence eastward to the passage called Jefferies's Ford, and had already proceeded down the east side of the Brandywine very nearly to the Birmingham Meeting-house. It was then, at about two o'clock in the afternoon, only a short distance from General Sullivan's flank and rear, having completed, since it set out early in the morning, a march of nearly seventeen miles. The Birmingham Meeting-house, a fine example of the early places of worship of the Society of Friends, and still in excellent preservation, stands upon the high ground in the hills that rise to the east of the Brandywine, about three miles toward the north from the position occupied by General Washington at Chadd's Ford.
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