Skip to content

OPEN TODAY: 10 A.M.–5 P.M.

Tickets

Manuscripts

An Orderly Book of Samuel Grubb's Company, 1759

1 of 118


You might also be interested in

  • Lieutenant Joseph Bull's orderly book, 1759

    Lieutenant Joseph Bull's orderly book, 1759

    Manuscripts

    Kept by a soldier of the 1st Battalion of the New York Regiment and concerns the actions of the British army at Schenectady and Forts Herkimer, Stanwix, Oswego, and Ontario, between May 25 and November 1, 1759.

    mssHM 687

  • Image not available

    Colonel Henry Bouquet's Orders

    Manuscripts

    The orderly book contains orders of Colonel Henry Bouquet in connection with General John Forbes's assult on Fort Dusquesne. Also pertains to Forts Raystown and Lyttelton, PA. Covers June 17 to September 14, 1758.

    mssHM 613

  • Orderly book, 1761

    Orderly book, 1761

    Manuscripts

    The orderly book was kept by John Grant of Archibald McNeil's company in the 2nd Connecticut Regiment. Kept between June 20 and October 17, 1761, this orderly book pertains to the British occupation of Crown Point, N.Y. Also contains miscellaneous accounts, verses, and memoranda to 1801.

    mssHM 595

  • Orderly book of the 71st Highland Regiment of Foot (Fraser's Highlanders), 1779, Apr. 27 - June 15

    Orderly book of the 71st Highland Regiment of Foot (Fraser's Highlanders), 1779, Apr. 27 - June 15

    Manuscripts

    A battalion orderly book covers Prevost's raid. The first entry, April 27, 1779, was penned when the British forces concentrated at Ebenezer, Ga., about to cross into South Carolina; the last is dated June 15, five days before the British victory of Stono Ferry. The orders cover different aspects of the campaign: logistics; Southern loyalists; numerous Negro slaves who "horly resorts to the army," and particularly "great want of Dissiplen." The orders for May 29 noted that "the Batt[alio]n is now become so notorious for maurauding & plundering White & Negroe women of all Denominations, the men absenting themselves from camp day & night without leave asked or given," that the commanding officer had to call on other officers to "to exert their authority in support of their own character & at least to preserve some part of that character given to Scotsmen on the field."

    mssHM 72267

  • Orderly book of Philip John Schuyler, 1775, June 28 - 1776, April 18, New York, Fort Ticonderoga, Albany, Fort St. George

    Orderly book of Philip John Schuyler, 1775, June 28 - 1776, April 18, New York, Fort Ticonderoga, Albany, Fort St. George

    Manuscripts

    Orderly book of the Northern Department under the command of Philip John Schuyler covers the period from June 1775 to April 18, 1776.

    mssHM 663

  • Image not available

    Enoch Poor His Book 1759 : A Journal From Newbury to Saint John's

    Manuscripts

    Journal that Enoch Poor kept during his military service, including his accounts of three expeditions upstream in July and September 1759, the negotiations with the Acadians who had surrendered at the fort following the fall of Quebec, and soldiers' discontent over their pay.

    mssHM 610