| Anonymous - History - 1813 - 552 pages
...and Captain M'Kee, and nothing could exceed their order and steadiness. A few prisoners were taken by them during the advance, whom they treated with every...Excellency that such was their forbearance and attention to zchut KUS required of them, that the enemy sustained no other loss in men than what was occasioned... | |
| Isaac Brock - Canada - 1845 - 492 pages
...and Captain M'Kee, and nothing could exceed their order and steadiness. A few prisoners were taken by them during the advance, whom they treated with every...loss in men than what was occasioned by the fire of our batteries. The high sense I entertain of the abilities and judgment of Lieut.-Colonel Myers, induced... | |
| Isaac Brock - Canada - 1847 - 518 pages
...and Captain M'Kee, and nothing could exceed their order and steadiness. A few prisoners were taken by them during the advance, whom they treated with every...loss in men than what was occasioned by the fire of our batteries. The high sense I entertain of the abilities and judgment of Lieut.-Colonel Myers,* induced... | |
| Charles Knight - Great Britain - 1862 - 738 pages
...steadiness. A few prisoners were taken by them during the advance, whom they treated with every humanity. Such was their forbearance and attention to what was...loss in men than what was occasioned by the fire of our battery." f This might have been an exceptional case, in which the common ferocity of Indian warfare... | |
| Charles Knight - Great Britain - 1880 - 1318 pages
...steadiness. A few prisoners were taken by them during the advance, whom they treated with every humanity. Such was their forbearance and attention to what was...enemy sustained no other loss in men than what was orcrisioned by the fire of our battery." f This might have been an exceptional case, in which the common... | |
| Charles Knight - Great Britain - 1880 - 1316 pages
...steadiness. A few prisoners were taken by them during the advance, whom they treated with every humanity. Such was their forbearance and attention to what was required of them, t:iatthe enemy sustained no other loss in men than what was occasioned by the fire of our battery."... | |
| David Breakenridge Read - Aggressiveness - 1894 - 284 pages
...and Captain McRee, and nothing could exceed their order and steadiness. A few prisoners were taken by them during the advance, whom they treated with every...loss in men than what was occasioned by the fire of our batteries. " The high sense I entertain of the abilities and judgment of Lieut.-Colonel Myers induced... | |
| Michigan - 1896 - 758 pages
...and Captain MoKee, and nothing could exceed their order and steadiness, a few prisoners were taken by them during the advance whom they treated with every...loss in men than what was occasioned by the fire of our batteries. The high sense I entertain of the abilities and judgment of Lieut Colonel Myers induced... | |
| Richardson (Major, John), Alexander Clark Casselman - Canada History War of 1812 - 1902 - 452 pages
...and Captain M'Kee and nothing could exceed their order and steadiness. A few prisoners were taken by them, during the advance, whom they treated with every...loss in men than what was occasioned by the fire of our batteries. by Lieut. -Col. Nichol,1 Quarter-Master-General of the Militia. Captain Glegg, my Aid-de-Camp... | |
| L. Homfray Irving - Canada - 1908 - 338 pages
...and Captain McKee, and nothing could exceed their order and steadiness. A few prisoners were taken by them, during the advance, whom they treated with every...loss in men than what was occasioned by the fire of our batteries." (Brock's Despatch, 17 Aug., 12.) ' "He (Norton) and the Indians particularly distinguished... | |
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