Letter to George Washington (31 October 1776)
“By the letter that will accompany this, and was to have gone last night by Major Mifflin, your Excellency will see what measures I took before your favor came to hand. The passing of the ships up the river is, to be sure, a full proof of the insufficiency of the obstructions in the river to stop the ships from going up; but that garrison employs double the number of men to invest it that we have to occupy it. They must keep troops at King's Bridge, to prevent a communication with the country; and they dare not leave a very small number, for fear our people should attack them.”
Letter to George Washington (9 October 1776)
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Nathanael Greene 126
American general in the American Revolutionary War 1742–1786Related quotes
Letter to George Washington (7 October 1776)
Letter to George Washington (9 October 1776)
Lady Wentworth.
Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. (1919)
Speech to the Canada Club, London (21 November 1927), quoted in Our Inheritance (London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1938), p. 141.
1927
Context: Your country is a country for men from the North, the hardy virile races. Quality before quantity any day. Build up with the best. What does it matter if it is a hundred years, or two hundred years, or more, before your country is full? Keep the stock you have, and the men and women you have, and see that the coming generations are in no way inferior to them.
“Your Excellency's favor of the 21st came to hand the evening of the 25th.”
Letter to George Washington (August 1778)
Letter to George Washington (24 April 1779)
Prime Minister's Questions (2 June 1981) http://www.margaretthatcher.org/document/104659
First term as Prime Minister
Leopold II, Het hele Verhaal, Johan Op De Beeck Horizon, 2020 https://klara.be/leopold-ii-aflevering-8-0 ISBN 9789463962094 Stanley Points out to King Leopold II Of Belgium that the Congo free State which was a loss-making endeavor at that time that rubber extraction has a possibility to make the colony profitable.