The Cambridge History of the British Empire, Volume 6John Holland Rose, Arthur Percival Newton, Henry Dodwell, Ernest Alfred Benians Macmillan, 1929 - Great Britain |
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Page 93
... effective occupation , and force alone could decide their quarrel unless pacific tendencies at home were strong enough to restrain the local tendencies to conflict . But neither from England nor from France was any definite or ...
... effective occupation , and force alone could decide their quarrel unless pacific tendencies at home were strong enough to restrain the local tendencies to conflict . But neither from England nor from France was any definite or ...
Page 94
... effective military organisation and of an adequate executive . In Canada the Governor , if occasionally hampered by ... effective soldiers , while her 15,000 militiamen were better organised and more effective than their British ...
... effective military organisation and of an adequate executive . In Canada the Governor , if occasionally hampered by ... effective soldiers , while her 15,000 militiamen were better organised and more effective than their British ...
Page 117
... effective machinery for raising troops or taxes were too much even for Pitt's inspiring exhortations , and performances lagged behind promises . The thirteen colonies had to be united before they could be effective in war . Pitt's ...
... effective machinery for raising troops or taxes were too much even for Pitt's inspiring exhortations , and performances lagged behind promises . The thirteen colonies had to be united before they could be effective in war . Pitt's ...
Contents
CHAPTER I | 1 |
The Cordillera | 7 |
Relations of the Aborigines to the Settlers | 13 |
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