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This bound memorandum chronicles events leading up to and during the Battle of Germantown. Captain William Scott describes the capture of a prisoner on the Lime Kiln Road just prior to the battle that alerted the British to the presence of American forces.
Mar 8, 2002 · Scott joined his regiment in September 1776 and was captured at the Battle of Fort Washington on 16 Nov. 1776. He subsequently escaped captivity a second time, and on 1 Jan. 1777 he was named a captain in Col. David Henley’s Additional Continental Regiment.
Mar 15, 2001 · Mr. Scott was the captain of the Boeing 727 when a passenger under the name of Dan Cooper boarded in Portland for the short flight to Seattle. Midway, he passed a note to a flight attendant,...
- Susan Gilmore
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Nov 24, 2018 · The only verified evidence ever found was a small cache of $20 bills discovered along the Columbia River in 1980. They carried serial numbers that matched some of the...
- Business Reporter
Mar 16, 2001 · William “Scotty” Scott, 81, who piloted the plane hijacked by the notorious D.B. Cooper. Scott was the Northwest Airlines pilot at the controls Nov. 24, 1971, when a passenger named Dan...
William Scott was commissioned as a Captain in the 1st New Hampshire Regiment, Continental Line on November 8, 1776. He was charged with raising a company from in and around Peterborough, New Hampshire.
Captain William Scott (b.1752) was a company commander in the British 17th Regiment of Foot. He participated in many battles and campaigns during the American Revolutionary War, including the Philadelphia campaign. This three-page memorandum describes the events leading up to, and the conduct of, the Battle of Germantown, on October 4, 1777.