v. AmericanR. H. Whitten Company, 1904 |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 30
Página 24
... British dominion in the New World . They found the land all they had been told . Ralph Lane , the governor , wrote home : " It is the goodliest soil under the cope of heaven ; the most pleasing territory in the world ; the continent is ...
... British dominion in the New World . They found the land all they had been told . Ralph Lane , the governor , wrote home : " It is the goodliest soil under the cope of heaven ; the most pleasing territory in the world ; the continent is ...
Página 27
... British soil . The fate of the Armada is well known . England triumphed . But several years passed before Raleigh , who was now deep laden with debt , was able to send out a vessel to the relief of his abandoned colonists . When the ...
... British soil . The fate of the Armada is well known . England triumphed . But several years passed before Raleigh , who was now deep laden with debt , was able to send out a vessel to the relief of his abandoned colonists . When the ...
Página 44
... British settlements , but was of the type of them all . Wherever any Indian showed himself he was instantly shot down . Wher- ever a white man ventured within reach of the red foe he was slain on the spot or dragged off for the more ...
... British settlements , but was of the type of them all . Wherever any Indian showed himself he was instantly shot down . Wher- ever a white man ventured within reach of the red foe he was slain on the spot or dragged off for the more ...
Página 76
... British , and the French , —the Spanish made slaves of them and dealt with them with shocking cruelty , and the British were , in a different way , as unjust , and at times little less cruel . As for the French , while they showed more ...
... British , and the French , —the Spanish made slaves of them and dealt with them with shocking cruelty , and the British were , in a different way , as unjust , and at times little less cruel . As for the French , while they showed more ...
Página 133
... of the authority of the British king . " Thus we owe to the Regulators of North Caro- lina the first decided step in the great struggle for independence so soon to come . And to North Carolina GOVERNOR TRYON AND THE REGULATORS . 133.
... of the authority of the British king . " Thus we owe to the Regulators of North Caro- lina the first decided step in the great struggle for independence so soon to come . And to North Carolina GOVERNOR TRYON AND THE REGULATORS . 133.
Términos y frases comunes
adventure American arms army attack Bacon Barataria Bay battle bayonet began boat British brought burning canoes Captain capture Carolina cavalry Chambersburg chief Colonel colony command Confederate Cornwallis crossing daring death Dunmore Eli Whitney enemy expedition famous Federal fight fire force forest Fort Fisher French Golden Horseshoe governor guns hand head heard horses hour House of Burgesses hundred Indians Jackson Jamestown Jean Lafitte journey Kaskaskia killed Lafitte land leader looked Lord Lord Dunmore Mexican miles Mississippi Morgan morning mountains Natchez night North North Carolina once Opechancanough Orleans party passed Patrick Henry patriots pirates Powhatan prisoners reached ready rear ride river road rode sailed Salle savages seemed sent settlers ships soldiers soon Soto South Spaniards Spanish story stream Streight Stuart surrender Texans thousand told took town tribes troops village Virginia waters whites Williamsburg woods wounded