
Harper's encyclopædia of United States history from 458 1906, based upon the plan of Benson John Lossing .. . etreat of the Confederates fromGettysburg he led the charge into Hagers-town. He lost his life in a raid under-taken for the purpose of releasing Na- Huguenot faith in 1083, and removed toNew York to work among the Frenchunder the Reformed Church. In 1688 theFrench erected their first church inMarketfield Street, between Broad andWhitehall streets; in 1692 Daillg narrowlyescaped imprisonment because he had de-nounced the violent measures of JacobLeisler {q. V.) ; and in 1696 he b
Harper's encyclopædia of United States history from 458 1906, based upon the plan of Benson John Lossing .. . etreat of the Confederates fromGettysburg he led the charge into Hagers-town. He lost his life in a raid under-taken for the purpose of releasing Na- Huguenot faith in 1083, and removed toNew York to work among the Frenchunder the Reformed Church. In 1688 theFrench erected their first church inMarketfield Street, between Broad andWhitehall streets; in 1692 Daillg narrowlyescaped imprisonment because he had de-nounced the violent measures of JacobLeisler {q. V.) ; and in 1696 he becamepastor of the School Street Church inBoston. He died in Boston, Mass., May21, 1715. Daiquiri, a sea-coast town in theprovince of Santiago, about 15 miles eastof Santiago, Cuba. It was here that theAmerican army of invasion disembarkedafter the declaration of war against Spainin 1898. After Gen. William RufusShaftee (q. V.), commander of the expe-dition, had accepted the offer of the servicesof the Cuban troops under General Garcia,he furnished them with rations and am-munition. A number of sharp-shooters,. DAIQOIRI, WHERE THE AMERICAN ARMY OP INVASION DJSKMBARKKD, tional prisoners at Libby prison and Belle machine - guns, and mountain artillery Isle, near King and Queens Court-house, were landed to aid the Cubans in clear- Va., March 4, 1864. ing the hills, after which 6,000 men were Daill^, PiEEKE, clergyman; born in put ashore on June 22. The landing was France in 1649; banished because of his difBeult on account of the defective trans- DAKOTA—DALE port facilities, but still the Spaniardscould offer no serious opposition, as theywere held in cheek by the Cubans and theshells of the American warships, and alsoby the feint of Admiral Sampson to bom-bard Juragua. On June 23, 0,000 moretroops were landed, and a division Henkt W. Lawton (q. -v.)marched to Siboney {) in order to gi^uplace to the division of JacobF. Kent (q. v.) While General Sha
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Keywords: ., bookauthorwilsonwoodrow18561924, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900