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  1. Há 3 dias · John Burgoyne (born 1722, Sutton, Bedfordshire, England—died June 4, 1792, London) was a British general, best remembered for his defeat by superior American forces in the Saratoga (New York) campaign of 1777, during the American Revolution.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  2. Há 1 dia · Lacock abbey appropriated Shrewton church under a grant of 1241. In 1242 Ives the merchant and his wife Sibyl gave to the abbey a tenement and rents in Shrewton, and Hugh Burgoyne and his wife Maud gave 20s. rent from Ives's tenement.

  3. Há 3 dias · There is a gravestone that says he was a Major but we could not find his additional service record.* Rev. Alexander B. Murray (1850 – 18 Aug 1934) married Emily A. McDonald (1875 – 1936) in New Brunswick in 1888. They had 3 daughters, Helen, Hilda and Clyde, and 4 sons, Alexander, Ian, Hugh, and Angus.

  4. Há 4 dias · Burgoyne wrote out his strategy as "Thoughts for Conducting the War on the Side of Canada". He submitted it to Lord Germain, and on February 20, 1777 he won approval and beat his rival for independent command. His plan was adopted, and he would personally lead the main thrust of the Saratoga campaign.

  5. Há 2 dias · The transaction was confirmed on 8 Dec. 1544, when Henry VIII granted to Robert Burgoyne and John Scudamore the house and site of the late priory of Wroxall, the fishing of Wroxall Poole, together with the gardens, orchards, &c., then in the occupation of Richard Coke; also the rectory and tithes of the parish of Wroxall, for £588 ...

  6. Há 4 dias · The second block takes in the shop houses on Green Lanes betweenand Burgoyne and Umfreville Roads and the first two houses on the north side of Umfreville and the south of Burgoyne. The shop houses are of an exactly similar style to the ones the Wickeses built at the bottom of Seymour Road and, by the turn of the century, father and son were living next door to one another in 95 and 97 ...

  7. 23 de mai. de 2024 · 23 May 2024 5:08 p.m. PST. "The "British" Army that laid siege to Fort Stanwix in August of 1777 was the brainchild of British General John Burgoyne, who wished for an independent command when his superior, Canadian Governor and General Guy Carleton renewed his offensive against the Americans on Lake Champlain in the summer of 1777.