「revolutionary」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)12ページ目
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, two pieces of which, depicting Roman and | Revolutionary War battle scenes for toy soldier sets, be |
During the | Revolutionary War it supplied grain to George Washington |
at supposedly occurred during or after the | Revolutionary War Battle of Germantown; the stories tell |
Lew (1743-1822), born a free black, was a | Revolutionary War soldier and a talented musician. |
ion was a naval battle during the American | Revolutionary War in which three galleys of the Georgia |
British officer who fought in the American | Revolutionary War and, later, a politician. |
He was the son of | Revolutionary War General Philip Schuyler. |
American | Revolutionary War Major Joseph Winston and later U.S. Co |
named for Richard Montgomery, an American | Revolutionary War general killed in 1775 while attemptin |
Groton, Massachusetts, the son of American | Revolutionary War officer Samuel Lawrence, Abbott Lawren |
He enlisted during the | Revolutionary War in 1776 and settled in Boston after th |
otable exhibits include a replica American | Revolutionary War redoubt from the 1781 Siege of Yorktow |
hineas Shepard early settler and Pensioner | Revolutionary War |
reat-great grandson of Major John James of | Revolutionary War fame. |
s a descendant of David Manson, an aide to | Revolutionary War General George Washington. |
of the Connecticut militia, and during the | Revolutionary War he accompanied General Wolcott's force |
was a grandson of Rufus Putnam of American | Revolutionary War fame. |
, Alston moved to South Carolina after the | Revolutionary War and settled near Greens Mill, which so |
Nash, who was an "American | Revolutionary War hero and general who was killed at the |
utenant Ebenezer Stearns who served in the | Revolutionary War with the Green Mountain Boys of Vermon |
a, where he saw action during the American | Revolutionary War at Bunker Hill, Brooklyn, and |
ter was Joseph Ward, a sixty-five year old | Revolutionary War veteran from New Jersey. |
ed States, being named during the American | Revolutionary War by a local colliery owner to commemora |
ore properly Fort Caswell, was an American | Revolutionary War fort that once stood at the Sycamore S |
ancis Lightfoot Lee and Richard Henry Lee, | Revolutionary War general Henry "Light Horse Harry" Lee, |
Armstrong served in the American | Revolutionary War as a major. |
tice John Marshall, attorney John Wickham, | Revolutionary War hero Peter Francisco, famed Union spy |
e graves of local heroes from the American | Revolutionary War through Spanish-American War. |
During the | Revolutionary War he served in the Continental Army at t |
val shipping caused by the outbreak of the | Revolutionary War with France prompted her purchase and |
y Graves; the widowed daughter of American | Revolutionary War Patriot CPT Jesee Richeson - (a wealth |
, being named for John Paul Jones's famous | Revolutionary War frigate by the same name. |
ernor of Mississippi and the grandson of a | Revolutionary War Hero of the same name. |
i River Valley (1686); site of an American | Revolutionary War era skirmish (1783); the first territo |
-1811), military commander in the American | Revolutionary War |
He was the son of | Revolutionary War soldier George Dyer. |
The school is named after | Revolutionary War General David Wooster, a Stratford nat |
adquarters of the Hanover Rifle Battalion, | Revolutionary War re-enactors. |
is noted from early American history as a | Revolutionary War encampment of General George Washingto |
f the regiment, was assigned following the | Revolutionary War by act of the General Assembly of Mary |
Carolina at Chapel Hill, named in honor of | Revolutionary War general and founder of the University |
At the beginning of the American | Revolutionary War he was commissioned first lieutenant i |
land grants to the area as rewards for his | Revolutionary War service. |
depth history that goes clear back to the | Revolutionary War in the surrounding areas as well. |
ch Wilhelm von Steuben during the American | Revolutionary War and was the place where the Society of |
sador for the Iroquois during the American | Revolutionary War and was able to persuade many Oneidas |
arms, one of which had been established by | Revolutionary War veteran Alexander McMillan, and the ot |
2-1775), born in Allegany County, American | Revolutionary War officer. |
l, Whitesell, or Whitsall) was an American | Revolutionary War skirmish fought on March 6, 1781, betw |
Named Camp Greene, after the | Revolutionary War hero, Nathanael Greene. |
During the | Revolutionary War one skirmish was fought in Ashe County |
Colson's Mill was a battle of the American | Revolutionary War that took place in North Carolina on J |
The grandson of | Revolutionary War officer, printer, and congressman Matt |
n the Continental Army during the American | Revolutionary War and a member of the Virginia House of |
's establishment, the land was an American | Revolutionary War grant given to Colonel Archibald Lytle |
n the Continental Army during the American | Revolutionary War and later a Rhode Island legislator. |
dependent state formed during the American | Revolutionary War |
He was a Loyalist during the American | Revolutionary War and was Mayor of New York from 1776 un |
Robert Baylor, a | Revolutionary War veteran and contractor from Virginia, |
originally used to bury soldiers from the | Revolutionary War operating under the name of St. John's |
tia in 1776 and served during the American | Revolutionary War and the War of 1812. |
garrison of the city until the end of the | Revolutionary War in 1783. |
is based on the famous "Midnight Ride" of | Revolutionary War patriot Paul Revere. |
n family, and his grandfather was American | Revolutionary War veteran William Paxton. |
Melancthon Wade, the son of an American | Revolutionary War officer and prisoner-of-war, Daniel Ev |
ds of four former slaves who fought in the | Revolutionary War and their families, is on this highway |
of Alamance in 1771, was a veteran of the | Revolutionary War and George Rogers Clark's 1778 expedit |
Jasper is named for William Jasper, a | Revolutionary War hero from South Carolina. |
of 1783 to 1793 and by the time the French | Revolutionary War broke out he was a lieutenant in HMS B |
He served in the American forces during | Revolutionary War and later moved to Kentucky. |
North Carolina militia during the American | Revolutionary War (1776-1783). |
wnship was named after Arthur St. Clair, a | Revolutionary War general and president of the Continent |
A | Revolutionary War reenactor at Boston's 2008 St. Patrick |
fensive position of Fort Putnam during the | Revolutionary War defensive network at West Point. |
er and artillery commander during the 1849 | revolutionary war in Palatinate and Baden, Germany. |
g the American War of Independence, French | Revolutionary War and Napoleonic Wars, especially at the |
ppitt Manufacturing Company was founded by | Revolutionary War officer, Col. Christopher Lippitt, his |
ed as Washington's headquarters during the | Revolutionary War from April 1782 until August 1783. |
The home itself is named for the | Revolutionary War battle of Saratoga, New York in which |
the son of Israel Melchinger, an American | Revolutionary War Hessian soldier who settled in Dover a |
eatest prosperity was between the American | Revolutionary War and about 1830, and is reflected in th |
During the American | Revolutionary War and throughout the nineteenth century, |
The Defence was an American | Revolutionary War privateer that was part of the Penobsc |
Pinckney fought in the American | Revolutionary War and became one of the principal framer |
The Historic Camden | Revolutionary War Site in Camden, South Carolina preserv |
goyne in Canada, he fought in the American | Revolutionary War with the Convention Army under Burgoyn |
Following the | Revolutionary War and the lost of Florida by the British |
himself in the early battles of the French | Revolutionary War and by 1794 he had been promoted to ge |
of Stephen Lush, a veteran of the American | Revolutionary War who was also a lawyer and member of th |
had been operating since shortly after the | Revolutionary war as a small snuff mill. |
den teeth and dressed in powdered wigs and | Revolutionary War attire begin to stalk the family and t |
to Samuel Whittemore III, son of the local | Revolutionary War hero. |
I'd think there is a community of American | Revolutionary War editors who have probably dealt with t |
eca chief who participated in the American | Revolutionary War on the side of Great Britain. |
A | Revolutionary War era cemetery and an old school house ( |
s and a gin distillery during the American | Revolutionary War era, is located on the Hockanum River. |
5, 1821) was an American farmer, surveyor, | Revolutionary War soldier, and New York State legislator |
the Shakers who settled here had also been | Revolutionary War veterans. |
1757 - February 24, 1829) was an American | Revolutionary War soldier and writer from Charleston, So |
ich accompanied the outbreak of the French | Revolutionary War in 1793, being made a Post Captain on |
y in the United States to be named for the | Revolutionary War general (and later President) George W |
x-given names from battles in the American | Revolutionary War or the original six frigates-were plan |
adok Magruder (1729-1811) was a farmer and | Revolutionary War patriot. |
nel in British service during the American | revolutionary war |
It is named for Alexander Hamilton, | Revolutionary War hero and the first United States Secre |
brother of Theodore Sedgwick), an American | Revolutionary War general who served with George Washing |
15, 1756 - August 4, 1818) was an American | Revolutionary war officer and Democratic-Republican Unit |
4, dubbed Fort Montgomery, in honor of the | Revolutionary War hero General Richard Montgomery who wa |
The village is named in honor of Polish | Revolutionary War hero Casimir Pulaski. |
ican history for an action in the American | Revolutionary War known as the Fortification of Dorchest |
ior to 1787 by its namesake, Tilman Dixon, | Revolutionary War soldier, where his historic home, Dixo |
ip to bear the name, and was named for the | Revolutionary War Battle of Princeton. |
rces of South Carolina during the American | Revolutionary War and was appointed a judge of the State |
He participated in the | Revolutionary War as an officer under the command of Fra |
Windham, Connecticut, Waldo served in the | Revolutionary War and later became a missionary and cler |
e area was slowed until after the American | Revolutionary War which relieved tense relations between |
Being a | Revolutionary War hero, and major patriot force for the |
g the American War of Independence, French | Revolutionary War and the Napoleonic Wars. |
When the | Revolutionary War began, his militia became part of the |
He served as captain and colonel in the | Revolutionary War in 1777 and 1778 in Grayson's Regiment |
During the American | Revolutionary War he was a lieutenant colonel of the New |
nd its county seat of Sumter are named for | Revolutionary War General Thomas Sumter. |
can military and political leader from the | Revolutionary War era to the early 19th Century. |
When the American | Revolutionary War began in 1775, St. Leger was a Lieuten |
ed as a town, named after Joseph Warren, a | Revolutionary War hero. |
He served in the | Revolutionary War and later became a member of the Virgi |
7, 1781) was a Colonel during the American | Revolutionary War and the brother-in-law of George Washi |
With the start of the American | Revolutionary War in 1775 and 1776, Abraham Drake was Lt |
a in "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow" and her | Revolutionary War hero husband Petrus Van Tessel |
In 1775 the American | Revolutionary War broke out and Alfred served as a capta |
He served in the | Revolutionary War as a private and subsequently as briga |
ns-Appalachian region between the American | Revolutionary War and the Civil War. |
1695 to 1698 and is the birthplace of the | Revolutionary War Colonel David Humphreys. |
After the end of the | Revolutionary War Col. Mooney moved to Holderness, New H |
Thomas Madison was an American | Revolutionary War veteran from Ashtabula County, Ohio, w |
Revolutionary War hero Francis Marion was born near Monc | |
fficer in the Royal Navy during the French | Revolutionary War and the Napoleonic Wars whose career w |
s containing: churches, battle sites (both | Revolutionary War and Civil War), and other tidbits of h |
The show, the oldest | revolutionary war drama in the United States, is about t |
Nathaniel Greene named after Rhode Island | Revolutionary War general Nathaniel Greene, but in the t |
h authorities worsened during the American | Revolutionary War and in 1781 he was arrested and held a |
During the American | Revolutionary War a portion of the Continental Army camp |
pted by General Philip Schuyler - American | Revolutionary War hero and father-in-law of Alexander Ha |
The outbreak of the American | Revolutionary War effectively brought an end to the effo |
He served in the | Revolutionary War as lieutenant colonel of militia in 17 |
During the | Revolutionary War Charles Washington served as colonel o |
tern officer in the Associaters during the | Revolutionary War and later was in command of a battalio |
He fought with the Virginia militia in the | Revolutionary War and represented Virginia 6th congressi |
tstill Avery (1741-1821), a fiery American | Revolutionary War hero who served as the first attorney |
rd, Georgetown, SC, and Samuel Prioleau, a | Revolutionary War Patriot. |
ice to the House; he was also one of seven | Revolutionary War veterans who, having survived into the |
He was an American | Revolutionary War officer who served as a colonel in the |
Named after | Revolutionary War Hero, General "Mad" Anthony B. Wayne, |
ds of four former slaves who fought in the | Revolutionary War and their families, is located on Rout |
His father, Philip, served in the | Revolutionary War and was in Valley Forge |
When the American | Revolutionary War began in 1776, Morris, who was a Loyal |
ber 21, 1788) was a lawyer, patriot of the | Revolutionary War and the 34th Governor of South Carolin |
the home of Henry “Light Horse Harry” Lee, | Revolutionary War hero; it was to Salona that Dolley Mad |
er in the New Hampshire Militia during the | Revolutionary War and was described as “having the innat |
(c 1749 to 6 January 1827), fought in the | Revolutionary War for Britain, then in the Chickamauga W |
g the American War of Independence, French | Revolutionary War and Napoleonic Wars. |
During the | Revolutionary War he served as a Major in the Ulster Cou |
The island was home to US | Revolutionary War fortifications in the 18th century, an |
It was a home of | Revolutionary War General Otho Holland Williams (1749-17 |
, 1759 - February 7, 1812) was an American | Revolutionary War veteran and statesman from the state o |
of Abner Casey, he served in the American | Revolutionary War along with his step brothers, brother( |
st Territory Governor Arthur St. Clair and | Revolutionary War Major-General. |
unded by Gideon G. Warren, former American | Revolutionary War officer. |
The Tomb of the Unknown | Revolutionary War Soldier (sometimes written as Tomb of |
ed an annual stipend to any veteran of the | Revolutionary War who could prove his service. |
t 1760), legendary heroine of the American | Revolutionary War |
orge Washington at the Tomb of the Unknown | Revolutionary War Soldier |
John Sullivan, | Revolutionary War general |
endent of numerous veterns of the American | Revolutionary War who served in Virginia. |
ndon County to Richard Richardson, a famed | Revolutionary War leader, he received his education at t |
eral Anthony Wayne Field", in honor of the | Revolutionary War hero who was the builder of the first |
e served as a sergeant during the American | Revolutionary War and later engaged in land surveying an |
George Esterly, a | Revolutionary War veteran, when he discovered springs in |
The French invasion during the French | Revolutionary War heralded a seizure of the monastery, a |
sh Army officer who served in the American | Revolutionary War and who later became a Member of Parli |
The | Revolutionary War in Virginia |
was the grandson of Francis Scott Key and | Revolutionary War colonel John Eager Howard. |
e of the nation's many capitals during the | Revolutionary War and after. |
ld, Massachusetts, the son and grandson of | Revolutionary War veterans. |
s killed in South Carolina in the American | Revolutionary War Battle of Eutaw Springs on 8 September |
He served in the | Revolutionary War as ensign in the Ninth Pennsylvania Re |
George Reid, | Revolutionary War officer |
His father was a | Revolutionary War captain in the 5th Virginia continenta |
During the | Revolutionary War he served as a sergeant in Captain Liv |
is the final resting place of at least six | Revolutionary War veterans, allegedly including Sgt. |
Main article: American | Revolutionary War |
jamin Cleveland, a colonel in the American | Revolutionary War |
thout representation' that resulted in the | Revolutionary War is inherent and just as actual in the |
It was home of American | Revolutionary War leaders Eliphalet Dyer and Jedediah El |
nd also appearing in an 1844 compendium of | Revolutionary War anecdotes by John Lauris Blake. |
He served in the | Revolutionary War as a sergeant and lieutenant under Gen |
In the | Revolutionary War period, the upper part of the Seneca R |
n for his service as an officer during the | Revolutionary War and as a politician in Georgia and New |
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