[The Winning of the West, Volume Two by Theodore Roosevelt]@TWC D-Link bookThe Winning of the West, Volume Two CHAPTER IX 90/116
It is worthy of note that the actual fighting at King's Mountain bore much resemblance to that at Majuba Hill a century later; a backwoods levy was much like a Boer commando.] The colonel-commandant was among the slain; of the four militia colonels present, two were killed, one wounded, [Footnote: In some accounts this officer is represented as a major, in some as a colonel; at any rate he was in command of a small regiment, or fragment of a regiment.] and the other captured--a sufficient proof of the obstinacy of the resistance. The American loss in killed and wounded amounted to less than half, perhaps only a third, that of their foes.
[Footnote: The official report as published gave the American loss as twenty-eight killed and sixty wounded.
The original document (in the Gates MSS., N.Y.Hist.
Soc.) gives the loss in tabulated form in an appendix, which has not heretofore been published.
It is as follows: RETURN OF KILLED AND WOUNDED. KILLED | WOUNDED | Col.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|