History of the Thirty-third Foot, Duke of Wellington's (West Riding) RegimentJarrold & Sons, Limited, the Empire Press, 1922 - 471 Seiten |
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Seite 13
... arrived , and expected to be among the first to advance . Consequently there was a very real need of clothing and other necessaries . In some way , more or less 1 Fortescue : " History of the Army . " 2 A statement is made that ...
... arrived , and expected to be among the first to advance . Consequently there was a very real need of clothing and other necessaries . In some way , more or less 1 Fortescue : " History of the Army . " 2 A statement is made that ...
Seite 14
... arrived before this place and the next day we broke ground . " On the 8th we stormed the Breach in the following manner : upon a signal given by a general discharge of all our guns and Mortars , a detachment of 200 English and Dutch ...
... arrived before this place and the next day we broke ground . " On the 8th we stormed the Breach in the following manner : upon a signal given by a general discharge of all our guns and Mortars , a detachment of 200 English and Dutch ...
Seite 39
... arrive in driblets from England . " It was not until the end of September that the whole of the army which Stair was to command landed in Flanders . 1742 . On leaving Ireland , the 33rd proceeded to Chester , 1743 . and later , having ...
... arrive in driblets from England . " It was not until the end of September that the whole of the army which Stair was to command landed in Flanders . 1742 . On leaving Ireland , the 33rd proceeded to Chester , 1743 . and later , having ...
Seite 40
... arrived before anything could be done . Austrian influence succeeded in causing the with- drawal of the English forces across the Rhine , and after a severe winter , during which the troops suffered greatly , Stair , still hampered by ...
... arrived before anything could be done . Austrian influence succeeded in causing the with- drawal of the English forces across the Rhine , and after a severe winter , during which the troops suffered greatly , Stair , still hampered by ...
Seite 41
... arrived when the army reached the town . George found himself in difficulties at the outset . He was made aware of the fact that Noailles had foreseen the probability of retreat , that retreat being necessarily across a narrow plain ...
... arrived when the army reached the town . George found himself in difficulties at the outset . He was made aware of the fact that Noailles had foreseen the probability of retreat , that retreat being necessarily across a narrow plain ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
2nd battalion 33rd Regiment 6th Division advance Antalo Antwerp arrived artillery assault attack Balaclava batteries battle Bergen-op-Zoom Bloemfontein Blücher Boers Brigade British army camp campaign Captain capture cavalry centre Clinton Colonel colours column command Commander-in-Chief companies Cornwallis corps Crimea Cronje defence detachment dispatch Dragoons Duke enemy enemy's engaged England English Ensign field fighting fire flank Foot force Fortescue France French front Galway garrison Gate Grenadiers Guards guns heavy honour horse India join June Kelly-Kenny killed Klip Drift La Haye Sainte Lieut Lieut.-Colonel Lieutenant Lieutenant-Colonel Light Division Light Infantry Lord Raglan loss Magdala Major Major-General Medal ment miles Modder morning mounted infantry moved movement Napoleon night officers orders position Prince prisoners quarters Quatre Bras rank and file realised rear Redan regi reinforcements retire retreat river road Royal Russians Sebastopol sent sergeants Seringapatam soldiers tion Tippoo took town Waterloo Wellesley Wellington wounded
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 146 - You have already been informed of my arrival on the borders of the Red Sea, with an innumerable and invincible army, full of the desire of relieving you from the iron yoke of England.
Seite 243 - His Royal Highness the Prince Regent has been pleased, in the name and on the behalf of His Majesty, to approve and confirm the finding and sentence of the Court.
Seite 312 - Gortschakoff, who commanded in person. From these it would appear that it was a most determined attempt to force us to raise the siege. Had they succeeded, Balaklava was to have been attacked by one portion of their army, while the heights on which we now are were to have been stormed with the other; at the same time a vigorous sortie was to have been made from the town on the French works, on our extreme left, from the Quarantine, and another on the works on our extreme right on Mount Sapoune.
Seite 166 - Plunder is stopped, the fires are all extinguished, and the inhabitants are returning to their houses fast. I am now employed in burying the dead, which I hope will be completed this day, particularly if you send me all the pioneers.
Seite 148 - Colonel was not alarmed by the alliance and concluded that "if it be possible to adopt a line of conduct which would not lead immediately to war, provided it can be done with honour, which I think indispensable in this Government, it ought to be adopted in preference to that proposed in the conversations. . . . Let the proclamation be sent to Tippoo with a demand that he should explain it and the landing of the troops. Don't give him reason to suppose that we imagine he has concluded an alliance...
Seite 142 - ... in rags, peeping out of the pack, with its mother's milk turned to ice upon its lips, — one and all stark, frozen, dead.
Seite 148 - Let the proclamation be sent to Tippoo with a demand that he should explain it and the landing of the troops. Don't give him reason to suppose that we imagine he has concluded an alliance with the objects stated in the proclamation; and finding he has derived so little benefit from the alliance, there is every probability that he will deny the whole, and be glad of an opportunity of getting out of the scrape. In the meantime we shall believe as much as we please, and shall be prepared against all...
Seite 243 - In a letter from His Grace to Earl Bathurst, .Secretary of State for the War Department, on the 17th. of -September, this passage occurs : — " I have long intended to write to you about the medal for Waterloo. I recommended that we should all have the same medal, hung to the same ribbon as that now used with the medals.
Seite 242 - I would likewise beg leave to suggest to your Royal Highness the expediency of giving to the non-commissioned officers and soldiers engaged in the Battle of Waterloo a medal. I am convinced it would have the best effect in the army ; and if that battle should settle our concerns, they will well deserve it.
Seite 85 - Brooklyn, from whence these battalions, without regarding the fire of cannon and smallarms upon them, pursued numbers of the rebels that were retiring from the heights so close to their principal redoubt, and with such eagerness to attack it by storm, that it required repeated orders to prevail upon them to desist from the attempt. Had they been permitted to go on, it is my opinion...