The Historical Records of the Fifth (Royal Irish) Lancers from Their Foundation as Wynne's Dragoons, in 1689, to the Present DayA. Doubleday, 1908 - 287 pages |
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Page xi
... killed and wounded the Regiment is not mentioned , while an entry in Lord Stair's Order Book ( Add . M.S. 20,005 ) is a paragraph giving the Regiment as being in Ireland . In the following pages there will be found but little reading ...
... killed and wounded the Regiment is not mentioned , while an entry in Lord Stair's Order Book ( Add . M.S. 20,005 ) is a paragraph giving the Regiment as being in Ireland . In the following pages there will be found but little reading ...
Page 3
... killing about 120 of them and taking prisoners and 2 small pieces of cannon , several horses and some good arms , without the loss of a single man . " This was the first time our men encountered the enemy in the field and having had so ...
... killing about 120 of them and taking prisoners and 2 small pieces of cannon , several horses and some good arms , without the loss of a single man . " This was the first time our men encountered the enemy in the field and having had so ...
Page 8
... kill and eat their horses . At this time the Irish General McCarthy was besieging the Castle of Crom on Lough Erne ; and another Irish force under Colonel Sarsfield was at the same time close to Ballyshannon , the design being to effect ...
... kill and eat their horses . At this time the Irish General McCarthy was besieging the Castle of Crom on Lough Erne ; and another Irish force under Colonel Sarsfield was at the same time close to Ballyshannon , the design being to effect ...
Page 9
... killing some 200 and taking 30 prisoners , and capturing a large number of arms . It was still but nine o'clock , and Berry returned to his ground and rested his men until a message arrived at about noon from Wolseley , ordering him to ...
... killing some 200 and taking 30 prisoners , and capturing a large number of arms . It was still but nine o'clock , and Berry returned to his ground and rested his men until a message arrived at about noon from Wolseley , ordering him to ...
Page 10
... killed the cannoneers , " who had courageously main- tained their fire to the last moment . The horse then came along the causeway in support . The brunt of the Enniskillen attack was borne by the Irish right . McCarthy , seeing this ...
... killed the cannoneers , " who had courageously main- tained their fire to the last moment . The horse then came along the causeway in support . The brunt of the Enniskillen attack was borne by the Irish right . McCarthy , seeing this ...
Other editions - View all
The Historical Records of the Fifth (Royal Irish) Lancers from Their ... Walter Temple Willcox No preview available - 2018 |
The Historical Records of the Fifth (Royal Irish) Lancers: From Their ... Walter Temple Willcox No preview available - 2017 |
The Historical Records of the Fifth (Royal Irish) Lancers from Their ... Walter Temple Willcox No preview available - 2018 |
Common terms and phrases
19th Hussars 2nd Lieut 5th Dragoons 5th Lancers 5th Royal Irish Allies army arrived artillery Athlone attack August battalions battle Belturbet Blenheim Boers British camp campaign Captain captured Colonel column command Cornet corps crossed DATE OF JOINING defence detachment Dragoon Guards Dublin Duke Dutch Elector of Bavaria enemy enemy's English Enniskillen fight fire Flanders flank foot force French gallant garrison Ginckell grenadiers ground guns halted Hamilton Hill horse and dragoons Hussars Inniskilling Ireland James July June Khartoum killed King Ladysmith Liége Lieutenant Lord Major Major-General Malplaquet marched Marlborough Mbulwana Meanwhile Meuse miles morning Mounted Infantry moved Namur Natal night Officers ordered Oudenarde Prince Ramillies RANK rear Regiment retreat rifle river rode Ross ROYAL IRISH DRAGOONS Scheldt Schomberg Scots Scott Chisholme sent Sergeant SERVICES AND REMARKS siege Sir George White soldiers squadrons Suakim town troops village Villeroi William wounded WYNNE WYNNE'S Dragoons zariba
Popular passages
Page 89 - I have not time to say more, but to beg you will give my duty to the queen, and let her know her army has had a glorious victory. M. Tallard and two other generals are in my coach, and I am following the rest. The bearer, my aide-de-camp, Colonel Parke, will give her an account of what has passed. I shall do it, in a day or two, by another more at large. MARLBOROUGH.
Page 123 - Sir— As a friend to humanity, I request you will surrender the town of Ross to the Wexford forces now assembled against that town. Your resistance will but provoke rapine and plunder to the ruin of the most innocent. Flushed with victory, the Wexford forces, now innumerable and irresistible, will not be controlled if they meet with any resistance.
Page 109 - ... a deduction of two and a half per cent, from the pay of the foreign troops maintained by England.
Page 165 - Arab escaped alive. The affair was a matter of moments, and from first to last not more than five minutes elapsed. The fire of the Mounted Infantry principally and of the Guards Camel Regiment (who faced their rear rank about), of the detachment of the Sussex and of the right wing of the Heavy Camel Regiment, prevented the Arabs from reinforcing their attacking column ; but the brunt of the fight, the hand-to-hand encounter, was borne by the left wing of the last-named regiment. No men could have...
Page 72 - Italy, it was resolved to throw the bulk of his forces at once into Bavaria, and operate against Austria from the heart of Germany, by pouring down the valley of the Danube.
Page 120 - The very disgraceful frequency of courts-martial, and the many complaints of irregularities in the conduct of the troops in this kingdom, having too unfortunately proved the Army to be in a state of licentiousness which must render it formidable to every one but the enemy...
Page 14 - ... his right shoulder, so as to carry off part of his clothes and skin and produce a considerable contusion. This accident, which he bore without the least emotion, created some confusion among his attendants, which, the enemy perceiving, concluded he was killed, and shouted aloud in token of their...
Page viii - COXE'S MEMOIRS OF THE DUKE OF MARLBOROUGH. With his original Correspondence, collected from the family records at Blenheim. Edited by Archdeacon W. CoXE, MA, FRS Revised Edition by JOHN WADE. With Portraits and Index. 3 vols. post 8vo. y. 6d. each. *.* An Atlas of the plans of Marlborough's campaigns, 410.
Page 120 - Excellency the Lord- Lieutenant full powers to put down the rebellion, and to punish rebels in the most summary manner, according to martial law, does hereby give notice to all his Majesty's subjects, that he is determined to exert the powers...
Page 90 - Tallard's army is taken or destroyed. The bravery of all our troops on this occasion cannot be expressed; the generals as well as the officers and soldiers behaving themselves with the greatest courage and resolution, the horse and dragoons having been obliged to charge four or five several times.