983 resultados para Massachusetts. Militia. Washington Light Infantry Company.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Sketches of the Twenty-second, Twenty-seventh and Thirty-eighth regiments are included.
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Each volume has special t.-p.: v. 1. Scott's militia tactics; comprising the duty of infantry, light-infantry, and riflemen ... 2d ed., rev. and enl. Hartford, 1821; v. 2 [pt. 1] The artillerist; comprising the drill without arms, and exercises and movements of the light and horse artillery. Together with a sword exercise for the light artillery ... 2d ed.--improved and enl. Hartford, 1821; v. 2 [pt. 2] Cavalry tactics; comprising the modern mode of discipline and sword exercise, for the cavalry generally ... Hartford, 1822.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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20th Congress, 2nd session. House Doc. no.3.
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Binder's title: Military tactics.
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Full Title: Massachusetts militia claims : letter from the Secretary of War, transmitting, in pursuance of a resolution of the House of Representatives of the 15th Dec., 1826, a report upon the subject of the claims of the State of Massachusetts for certain services rendered during the late war 20th Congress, 2nd session. House Doc. no.3. Caption title. May 10, 1828 - Read, and laid upon the table. December 5, 1828- Printed by order of the House of Representatives.
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Transportation corridors in megaregions present a unique challenge for planners because of the high concentration of development, complex interjurisdictional issues, and history of independent development of core urban centers. The concept of resilience, as applied to megaregions, can be used to understand better the performance of these corridors. Resiliency is the ability to recover from or adjust easily to change. Resiliency performance measures can be expanded on for application to megaregions throughout the United States. When applied to transportation corridors in megaregions and represented by performance measures such as redundancy, continuity, connectivity, and travel time reliability, the concept of resiliency captures the spatial and temporal relationships between the attributes of a corridor, a network, and neighboring facilities over time at the regional and local levels. This paper focuses on the development of performance measurements for evaluating corridor resiliency as well as a plan for implementing analysis methods at the jurisdictional level. The transportation corridor between Boston, Massachusetts, and Washington, D.C., is used as a case study to represent the applicability of these measures to megaregions throughout the country.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Errata page following p.479.
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Mode of access: Internet.