[The Winning of the West, Volume Two by Theodore Roosevelt]@TWC D-Link book
The Winning of the West, Volume Two

CHAPTER IX
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Allaire, in his diary, says Ferguson had only eight hundred men, but almost in the same sentence enumerates nine hundred and six, giving of the regulars nineteen killed, thirty-three wounded, and sixty-four captured (one hundred and sixteen in all, instead of one hundred and thirty-two, as in the American account), and of the tories one hundred killed, ninety wounded, and "about" six hundred captured.

This does not take account of those who escaped.

From Ramsey and De Peyster down most writers assert that every single individual on the defeated side were killed or taken; but in Colonel Chesney's admirable "Military Biography" there is given the autobiography or memoir of a South Carolina loyalist who was in the battle.

His account of the battle is meagre and unimportant, but he expressly states that at the close he and a number of others escaped through the American lines by putting sprigs of white paper in their caps, as some of the whig militia did--for the militia had no uniforms, and were dressed alike on both sides.

A certain number of men who escaped must thus be added.] The forces were very nearly equal in number.


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