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Page 135
... army was considered fully strong enough to take Quebec . In June the Massachusetts Govern- ment received orders to provide pilots and a supply of pro- visions for the fleet . Sixteen days later the fleet itself arrived . Considerable ...
... army was considered fully strong enough to take Quebec . In June the Massachusetts Govern- ment received orders to provide pilots and a supply of pro- visions for the fleet . Sixteen days later the fleet itself arrived . Considerable ...
Page 144
... army might have been proud . Besides capturing Louisburg , they probably saved their own country from invasion . A French fleet of seven ships was on its way to attack New England , when they heard of the capture of Louisburg , and gave ...
... army might have been proud . Besides capturing Louisburg , they probably saved their own country from invasion . A French fleet of seven ships was on its way to attack New England , when they heard of the capture of Louisburg , and gave ...
Page 190
... army , and a member of Parliament . From the outset of his public career , he de- voted himself to bettering the lot of the wretched and help- less , and was described by Pope as- " Driven by vast benevolence of soul . " By the account ...
... army , and a member of Parliament . From the outset of his public career , he de- voted himself to bettering the lot of the wretched and help- less , and was described by Pope as- " Driven by vast benevolence of soul . " By the account ...
Page 212
... army . But , when the main body of six thousand men advanced , the French , finding themselves too weak to hold the fort , retreated . Thus it was decided that England , and not France , was to possess the valley of the Ohio and the ...
... army . But , when the main body of six thousand men advanced , the French , finding themselves too weak to hold the fort , retreated . Thus it was decided that England , and not France , was to possess the valley of the Ohio and the ...
Page 214
... army crossed in the night , and safely reached the heights above the river . So desperate did this attempt seem that , when Montcalm heard of it , he imagined that it was only a feint to draw him from his post . When he learned his ...
... army crossed in the night , and safely reached the heights above the river . So desperate did this attempt seem that , when Montcalm heard of it , he imagined that it was only a feint to draw him from his post . When he learned his ...
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America appointed army Assembly attack attempt battle Boston British called Cambridge Canada captured charter chief Christ's College cloth coast colonists command Commissioners Confederate Congress Connecticut conquest Cortez Council Court Crown 8vo declared defeated dispute Dutch Edition elected ELEMENTARY enemy English English Government Europe Extra fcap favour Fcap federacy Federal fleet followed force formed France freemen French gave Governor granted hundred important independent Indians inhabitants islands King land laws Lord marched Maryland Massachusetts matter ment Mexico Miantonomo miles Moreover nation natives Newhaven North Northern officers Oglethorpe Opechancanough Owens College Parliament party peace Peru Plymouth Plymouth Company President proprietors Puritans Quakers refused Rhode Island river sailed School seemed sent settled settlement settlers ships slavery slaves soon South Carolina Southern Spain Spaniards Spanish Stamp Act surrender territory thousand tion took town trade treaty tribes troops Virginia Virginia Company voyage Washington whole Yamassees York
Popular passages
Page 232 - DO, in the name and by the authority of the good people of these colonies, solemnly publish and declare, that these united colonies, are, and of right ought to be, free and independent states ; that they are absolved from all allegiance to the British crown, and that all political connexion between them and the state of Great Britain, is and ought to be totally dissolved...
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