Citation
The boys of 1745 at the capture of Louisbourg

Material Information

Title:
The boys of 1745 at the capture of Louisbourg
Series Title:
Stories of American history
Creator:
Otis, James, 1848-1912
Dana Estes & Company ( Publisher )
Colonial Press (Boston, Mass.) ( printer )
C.H. Simonds & Co. ( printer )
Geo. C. Scott & Sons ( Electrotyper )
Place of Publication:
Boston
Publisher:
Dana Estes & Company
Manufacturer:
Colonial Press
C.H. Simonds & Co.
Electrotyped by Geo. C. Scott & Sons
Publication Date:
Language:
English
Physical Description:
93 p. : ill. ; 20 cm.

Subjects

Subjects / Keywords:
Youth -- Conduct of life -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Conduct of life -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Soldiers -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Armed Forces -- Officers -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Battles -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Courage -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
History -- Juvenile fiction -- Louisbourg (N.S.) -- Siege, 1745 ( lcsh )
History -- Juvenile fiction -- United States -- King George's War, 1744-1748 ( lcsh )
Bldn -- 1895
Genre:
novel ( marcgt )
Spatial Coverage:
United States -- Massachusetts -- Boston
Target Audience:
juvenile ( marctarget )

Notes

Statement of Responsibility:
by James Otis ; illustrated.

Record Information

Source Institution:
University of Florida
Rights Management:
This item is presumed to be in the public domain. The University of Florida George A. Smathers Libraries respect the intellectual property rights of others and do not claim any copyright interest in this item. Users of this work have responsibility for determining copyright status prior to reusing, publishing or reproducing this item for purposes other than what is allowed by fair use or other copyright exemptions. Any reuse of this item in excess of fair use or other copyright exemptions may require permission of the copyright holder. The Smathers Libraries would like to learn more about this item and invite individuals or organizations to contact The Department of Special and Area Studies Collections (special@uflib.ufl.edu) with any additional information they can provide.
Resource Identifier:
002394791 ( ALEPH )
ALZ9698 ( NOTIS )
01391238 ( OCLC )
12034775 ( LCCN )

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THE BOYS OF 1745

AT THE CAPTURE OF LOUISBOURG







THE
“ Stories of American History ”

Series.

By JAMES OTIS,
Author of “Toby Tyler,” “ Jenny Wren’s Boarding House,”
etc. Each story complete in one volume; with 17 original

illustrations by 1.. J. Bridgman.
Small 12mo, neatly bound in extra cloth, 75 cents each.

i. When Dewey Came to Manila.
2. Off Santiago with Sampson.

Two new volumes on the recent Spanish-American -
War, in the author’s deservedly popular “ Stories of
American History ” Series.

3. When Israel Putnam Served the King.

4, The Signal Boys of 775: A Tale of the Sieg
of Boston. ;

5. Under the Liberty Tiree: A Story of the
Boston Massacre.

6. The Boys of 1745 at the Capture of Louisburg.
7. An Island Refuge: Casco Bay in 1676.
8. Neal the Miller: A Son of Liberty.

9. Ezra Jordan’s Escape from the Massacre at
Fort Loyall.

Dana Estes & Co., Publishers, Boston.
















THE BOYS OF 1745

AT THE

CAPTURE OF LOUISBOURG

BY
JAMES OTIS
AUTHOR OF “ToBy TYLER,” “THE Boys’ REVOLT,” “JENNY WREN’S

BoARDING-HOUSE,” “JERRY’S FAMILY,” Evrc.



Eellustraten

BOSTON
DANA ESTES & COMPANY
PUBLISHERS



Copyright, 1895,
By Esres anp LAuRIAT
All rights reserved

Colonial [ress :
C. H. Simonds & Co., Boston, Mass., U.S.A.
Electrotyped by Geo. C. Seott & Sons



CONTENTS.



PAGE
PREFACE : 7 : . . . . : ae . - 7
CuaPreR I. VOLUNTEER SOLDIERS : . ; . : . I
CHAPTER II. AN UNEXPECTED VISITOR : . : : . 27
CuHaprer III A CHANCE SHOT . : . - : . . 38
Cuapter IV. A CONFESSION . : : . . . . » 55
CHaprer .V. A NiGHT ATTACK. : . * ; . . 68

CHAPTER VI. AN APPEAL . 4 7 7 i 7 : . 80.







LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.



DESTROYING SrorES. . . . . . . « Frontispiece

PAGE
Major STORER RECEIVES THE RECRUITS : . . : . 14
PHIL GUARDING DIck . : . 7 . : : : ; 21

«TWICE DID COLONEL VAUGHAN CALL HIM INTO THE CABIN” 24

Dicx’s Visir. ; : : : . . : . : . 31
“Nor A MAN COULD BE SEEN” . . . : . . : 39
“Vou BrRiInG BRAVE NEws” . . . . . . . . 43
COLONEL VAUGHAN Hir. : . : . ; . . : 49
“KEEP THE FLAMES Down” . . : : : : . : 51
«Tr was You WHo TRIED TO SHOOT COLONEL VAUGHAN” . 59
“So rr was You” . : . : ; ; : : : ; 63
“He’LL BE HANGED” ©... ee
PHIL Is WOUNDED . : : : : . : . : . 73
“Dick was Bent, LIKE AN OLD MAN”. : : : ; 83
“Tur SENTINEL Stoop IRRESOLUTELY” — . : : . : 87

“Tue Town Was ABLAZE” . . : . . : : . gt











THE BOYS OF 1745

AT THE CAPTURE OF LOUISBOURG.

CHAPTER I.

VOLUNTEER SOLDIERS.

ROM the middle of February until the 24th of

March (on the day when the fleet of ninety trans-
ports and thirteen: vessels of war sailed from Nantasket
Roads, in Boston Harbour, bound on an expedition of
war to Nova Scotia), the town of Portsmouth, in the
colony of New Hampshire, was in a ferment of excite-
ment.

That the colonies were sufficiently strong to assist the
mother country in war surprised the thoughtless to the
verge of bewilderment, and many of the better-informed
citizens gravely questioned whether it was not a fool-
hardy piece of bravado to make an attack upon a place so
strongly fortified as was the French port of Louisbourg
in Nova Scotia.

Groups of people might have been seen conversing on
the streets at all hours of the day, and even late in the
evening, without fear of reprimand from those in author-

It



12 THE BOYS OF 1745,

ity, and it was an unusual occurrence when men or boys
passed each other without at least referring to the daring
campaign about to be begun by the colonies of Massa-
chusetts, Connecticut and New Hampshire.

Therefore it was that when Philip Towle and Richard
Sanbourne met in front of Master Leavitt’s store on a
certain morning in March, instead of discussing the possi-
bility of trapping musquash or mink before the ice had
left the stream, they spoke of the proposed expedition,
and Philip startled his companion not a little by announc-
ing, boldly, —

«‘T rowed across to Master Pepperrell’s last evening.”

“ Master Pepperrell? I should think you might call
him general, since he has been commissioned by the
Governors of three colonies.”

“Then it was to General Pepperrell’s that I went,” |
Philip replied, with a smile.

«What had you to find there?”

“T wanted to see Major John Storer, who is seeking
recruits.”

“Have you taken it into your head to go to war, Phil
Towle?”

«Why not ?. I was sixteen years old last January, and
already have arms as the law requires. As for the
uniform, I can do without one, or get mother to change
these clothes over. Sam Lowrey has already signed the
rolls, and doesn’t intend to trouble himself about a
soldier’s coat.”

“ But what made you think of such a thing?”





VOLUNTEER SOLDIERS. 13

« The need of money, Dick. You know how hard it is
to earn as much as may be needed for taxes, and the furs
I have taken this season won’t sell for enough to pay
them. Mother does all she can, and a hard time she has
of it, poor thing, since father was killed.”

«Tt is not much you can earn as a soldier. I am told
that the wages are only twenty-five shillings a month,
which means but fourteen sterling,—not quite a six-
pence a day.”

“Tt will be better than nothing; and there should be
prize-money, so Major Storer says. Even without it, two
months’ pay would be a great aid to mother just now.”

“Then you have decided ?”

« Yes, it amounts to that; for unless something happens
I shall enlist this evening.”

«And the major told you there would be prize-money:
for the soldiers?”

“He said there should be, in case the town was cap-
tured.”

“I suppose the soldiers will be allowed to loot it?”
Dick said, thoughtfully.

“Tt is usually considered their privilege, I am told.”

“Phil, I have a mind to go with you.”

“T wish you might, but there is no necessity in your
case, as in mine.” ,

«That makes no difference. I don’t believe father
would object, particularly after I tell him about the prize-
money.” oe,

Philip made no reply. He did not wish to influence





ig . LHE BOYS OF 1745.

his companion in any way, much as he would be pleased
to have him for a comrade. To him, the enlistment was
a means by which he might assist his widowed mother,
while Dick had no such inducement; his father was
believed to be blest with a goodly share of the world’s
goods, having been called a “miser” by more than one











reputable citizen, therefore it seemed as if his son might
well keep out of danger, unless his patriotism was at
boiling point, which was not at all probable.

With Phil, enlistment appeared to be the only way by
which he could earn the money his mother needed; he
did not choose to become a soldier because of a love for



VOLUNTEER SOLDIERS. 15

glory, or the-thought that his country needed him. An
invasion of Nova Scotia, whose inhabitants had never
done any wrong to the colony of New Hampshire, was a
matter which failed to arouse his enthusiasm.

Neither was Dick enthusiastic over the assault upon
the fortified town, save as it might give him booty; and
_ where anything of value was concerned, he could be
almost as “close-fisted”’ as his father.

When these two boys presented themselves as recruits
that evening, Major Storer did not question their
motives, but received them as gladly as he would have
received any other able-bodied candidates for military
honours who might be between the prescribed ages of
“sixteen and sixty.”

After having been accepted as volunteer soldiers, whose
services were to be paid for by the colony, the new
recruits were allowed to spend the greater portion of their
time as best pleased them. There was no question of
living in barracks, because none were provided by the
Government ; it was necessary to spend two hours each
day in drill, and then the embryo heroes were at liberty to
go where they wished, save on four especial occasions,
when Parson Moody preached even longer sermons than
usual, to the supposed improvement of their military edu-
cation, as well as the salvation of their souls.

_ Dick never lost sight of the idea that it might be pos-
sible for him to suddenly bécome rich, in case the town
was captured and sacked ;. but Phil’s mind was constantly
dwelling upon the coming separation from his mother.



16 THE BOYS OF 1746.

There was never a fellow in Portsmouth who: couid truth-
fully have called him a “sissy;’’ but he had not been
absent from home a single night since he was able to re-
member, and it was not pleasant to think of the time
when it would be impossible to kiss his mother good-night.

The day of parting came all too soon, and on the morn-
ing of the twentieth of March, with thirty others of his
company, among whom was Dick Sanbourne, he went on
board the twelve-gun sloop “ Vigilant,” to be carried to
Nantasket Roads, the rendezvous of the squadron.

This particular squad thought they were very fortunate
in being drafted to one of the war-vessels, instead of
being quartered on board an over-crowded transport, and
the majority of them were in the highest spirits, believing
it would be but a comparatively short time before they
returned, crowned with wreaths of victory. Perhaps they
did not count on coming back wearing veritable wreaths,
but they certainly expected to be greeted as conquerors.

Phil was far from being in a jolly mood. He had
parted with his mother shortly before daybreak, and the
tears were not yet dried on his cheeks when the sloop’s
mooring-lines were cast off.

It was but a short journey to the rendezvous, thanks to
the favouring breeze, and the ocean did not treat them
roughly, therefore the amateur soldiers were in good
bodily condition when they arrived, and Phil found an
antidote for homesickness in the stirring and wonderful
scenes around him.

The entire fleet lay at anchor in the Roads, and it was



VOLUNTEER SOLDIERS. 17

sucha spectacle as the soldiers from Portsmouth had never
witnessed before.

A hundred and three vessels, thirteen of them armed,
with red-coated men on every deck, and from the mast-
head of the frigate ‘“ Massachusetts” floating the flag
which bore the motto, “i desperandum. Christo
duce,’ which had been suggested by Parson George
Whitefield.

One day was allowed the recruits for sight-seeing, when
Phil and Dick visited Boston for the first time, and then
came the departure, when there was such an accompani-

”

ment of noisy enthusiasm that Phil had no opportunity to
indulge in tears. Besides, if he had felt like crying he
would have forced the tears back at whatever pang, for he
was a soldier, and as such should be too manly to whimper
like a baby. .

Three hours later a great change came over the red-
coated portion of the “Vigilant’s .

et

crew. The ocean was
no longer in a placid mood; the wind blew with more
violence than seemed necessary, and between decks lay
twenty-four of the thirty soldiers fast in the clutches of
the malady of the sea.

Phil felt confident he was beset with an illness from
which he would never recover, and Dick, who shared his
bunk, said, mournfully, —

“If there were forty towns to be sacked, and I had
known we would be delivered up to such an attack as this,
not even nites Pepperrell himself could have induced
me to come.’



18 THE BOYS OF 1748.

“Tt is terrible!’ Phil moaned, thinking of his mother
and home.

«We have been cheated!” and Dick endeavoured to as-
sume a sitting posture, but desisted after striking his head
painfully hard against the deck-timbers. “Is this the
pleasure excursion that was pictured ? Major Storer said
men ought to pay for such a privilege, instead of expect-
ing to be paid! I wonder how much he thinks would be
a fair price for me to pay for my enjoyment just now?”

Phil made no reply. Hewas conscious only of the sen-
sations of faintness and nausea, and did not dare to speak.

A. sailor, who came below on some errand, announced
that a northeast storm had sprung up, and the two boys
were quite convinced it could be nothing less than a
hurricane.

Whether it was a storm or hurricane, the foul weather
continued until the “Vigilant” entered the harbour of
Canseau, the fifth day of April, and Phil and Dick crept
on deck, looking like boys who had just arisen from a
fever.

And it was not surprising that they did look haggard
and worn. During the entire passage neither had been
able to partake of anything more nourishing than tea or
small fragments of ship’s bread; but hunger or weakness
was alike forgotten in the happy relief of being able to
walk about.

Dick’s countenance fell as he saw the small village of
Canseau, which the French lately took from the English,
but which had changed masters once more when the fleet
arrived.



VOLUNTEER SOLDIERS. 19

«Tf Louisbourg looks anything like this settlement, we
shan’t be benefited by looting the town,” he said, ruefully.
“Except fish, there is nothing here worth carrying away.
We were fools for coming.”

«That may be true in your case, but not in mine,’ Phil
replied, with a feeble attempt at a smile. “Each night I
have said to myself that another sixpence has been earned
for mother, and if the money could not be gotten in any
other way, I would endure the suffering over again for her
sake.”

« Sixpences don’t count with me,” Dick replied, loftily.
“Let's goon shore; I want to feel the solid earth under
my feet once more.”

« Will it be allowed?’

«Who is here to stop us?”

“ Major Storer should give us permission first.”

“JT don’t intend to ask him. When there is any fight-
gin to be done he can come to me about it; but he has no
authority while we are lying here idle.”

Phil's idea of a soldier’s duty was different, and he re-
fused to leave the sloop, ardently though he desired to
be on shore. .

A boat lay at the gangway; there was no guard near at
hand, and Richard Sanbourne, the son of his father, took
possession of her as boldly as if he was in sole command
of the expedition.

By a singular fortune no one in authority observed Dick
when he left the sloop; but the boat was soon missed, and
in a short time not only the captain, but Lieutenant-



20 THE BOYS OF 17485.

Colonel William Vaughan, of the New Hampshire forces,
who chanced to be on board at the time, knew what had
been done by a private soldier.

The officer was particularly angry because sucha breach
of discipline had been committed by one of his own com-
mand, and a squad of men were sent at once in search of
Dick.

Phil was not called upon to aid in capturing the auda-
cious soldier, and congratulated himself on being spared
the disagreeable duty of assisting in making a prisoner
of his friend; but before nightfall he found himself in a
much more unpleasant position than if he had been de-
tailed as one of the searchers.

Dick was on board again within an hour from the time
he had left so unceremoniously, and conducted at once
to the cabin, where he remained ten or fifteen minutes.
Then he was escorted on deck by two soldiers, who
guarded him closely until word had been brought to Phil
that he was to stand watch over the prisoner until further
orders.

For an instant there was a wild idea in the boy’s mind
of refusing to do such duty; but, fortunately, he realized
that by such a course he would not be aiding his friend,
and would get himself into very serious difficulties.

«There is no need of remaining below,” the sergeant
said, as he led the way forward. ‘ You can keep him here
without trouble, and as soon as we get some handcuffs
from the frigate you will be relieved. The orders are to
shoot him if he attempts to escape, so see to it that your
gun is loaded and ready for use.”






















VOLUNTEER SOLDIERS. 23

Dick had not spoken since he came from the cabin, but
when he was left comparatively alone with Phil, he said in
a low, angry tone, — .

“Tf these fellows think they can treat me in this
manner because I am to be paid a sixpence a day, they ’ll
soon discover their mistake.”

«But you are a soldier, Dick, and as such must obey
orders, one of which is not to absent yourself from
quarters without permission.”

“Does Bill Vaughan fancy he can make me come at his
beck and call? It isn’t six months since he wanted to
borrow money of my father, and here he is trying to make
out I’m his prisoner!”

“But you ave his prisoner, and he has the power to
make matters very uncomfortable for you, Dick, being an
officer of such high rank. Don’t rage, when it will only
end in injury to yourself; but beg pardon for what has
been done, and most likely nothing more will come of your
little excursion.”

“You must think I’m a fool to beg Bill Vaughan’s
pardon!”

“T shall surely think you one if you don’t.”

Dick did not take kindly to such advice, and moved a
few paces from his friend, remaining silent several mo-
ments, when he turned suddenly as he said, —

“Of course you don’t count on carrying out the orders
given by the sergeant.”

«What else can I do?”

«Turn your back when I want to slip over the bow.”



24 THE BOYS OF 1748.

“You would n’t think of trying to swim ashore?”

«Why not?”

“The gravest reason is, that the harbour is filled with
ice, and you would be chilled to the bone before swimming
a dozen strokes. Then, again, you might be out of the
frying-pan into the fire ashore, where it would be an easy
matter to recapture you.”



“I’m not so certain about that. Say, Phil, it will be
dark in half an hour. When I say the word will you look
aft five minutes or so?”

“JT don’t dare to disobey orders, Dick.”

“You’re a sneak, that’s what you are! I shall go
over, whether you help me or not, and once we’re back in
Portsmouth, Ill have a long score to settle with you!”



VOLUNTEER SOLDIERS. 25

Phil was too deeply hurt to make any reply, and Dick
leaned over the rail, as if no longer desirous of talking.

The sentinel felt quite certain his friend would not
attempt to carry into execution the threat made, and
walked slowly to and fro, wishing most earnestly that some
other soldier had been selected for the disagreeable duty.

The moments passed until the sun disappeared in the
western sky; the gloom of evening hung heavily over the
fleet, shutting out from view the shore, although so close
at hand, and Phil turned to reason with the prisoner just
as the latter leaped into the icy water.

For an instant the boy was too much alarmed and
surprised to make the least outcry. Even though his
own life had depended upon the act, he could not have
discharged a weapon at Dick.

While one might have counted twenty he remained
silent and motionless, and then cried at the full strength
of his lungs, — ,

“Man overboard! Man overboard!”

A dozen sailors and soldiers were by his side almost as
soon as the words had been uttered, but even then nothing
could be seen of the escaping prisoner.

Two hours later the boats returned from searching the
harbour and shore, and the report was that the labour had
been in vain,

“He must have sunk almost as soon as he struck the
icy water, sir,’ the sergeant reported to the captain. “It
don’t stand to reason a boy could swim a dozen yards
while it is so cold.”



26 THE BOYS OF 1746.

Next morning, on the books of the company was the
following entry:

“April 5th, 1745. Richard Sanbourne, while under
guard for disobedience of orders, leaped overboard, and
was drowned.”



CHAPTER II.
AN UNEXPECTED VISITOR.

HIL’S grief because of the untimely fate of Dick

Sanbourne was most intense. He reproached him-

self with being responsible for the sad affair, although he
could not explain why he was at fault.

Dick’s chances for escape would not have been _bet-
tered had the sentinel offered him every assistance in his
power, while there could be no question but that matters
might have been readily adjusted had the prisoner fol-
lowed his friend’s advice.

The young recruit had been guilty of insubordination ;
but on this expedition that was not a very serious matter,
for the officers and men were friends or acquaintances, and
there was no very decided attempt to exact strict military
obedience.

Phil’s comrades, on learning that he reproached him-
self as having contributed in some degree to his friend’s
probable death, used every effort to disabuse his mind of
such an idea, and the result was that he soon found him-
self the object of so much attention as to cause positive
embarrassment. Twice did Colonel Vaughan call him into
the cabin of the sloop to consider the matter carefully,
and on each occasion did his best to convince the young

27



28 THE BOVS OF 1745.

soldier that he was in no wise responsible for the deplor-
able event ; but without success.

On the following Sunday Phil asked permission to
attend the services held by Parson Moody, and listened
to the unusually long sermon intently, although there was
much which would ordinarily have distracted his atten-
tion. Save for the words of the clergyman, the Sabbath
presented nothing of that sanctity so marked at home;
on every hand were troops being drilled, workmen mov-
ing rapidly to and fro, or little knots of men discussing
secular matters with so much vehemence as to almost
drown the preacher’s trumpet-like tones.

To Phil’s disappointment, the good man made no ref-
erence to anything which might give’ his troubled heart
relief. The text, «Thy people shall be willing in the day

’

of Thy power,” was used with reference to the probable
capture of the fortified town, and the proposed destruc-
tion of such places of worship as did not meet with
Parson Moody’s approbation.

He returned to his quarters more depressed than ever,
and the three weeks of inactivity which elapsed before
the expedition could proceed, because of the ice which yet
blocked the entrance to the harbour of Louisbourg, only
aided in increasing his melancholy. 2

Then came the day when anticipations of immediate
battle drove from his mind all thoughts not connected
with a soldier's duties. The fleet set sail for Gabarus
Bay, and, twenty-four hours later, the troups were dis-
embarked before the town which was to be captured.



AN UNEXPECTED VISITOR. 29

It had not been possible to surprise the enemy, there-
fore those who had anticipated a sudden victory were
forced to prepare for a regular siege, in which raw
recruits were to try their metal against the strongest
fortifications in the New World, defended by veterans.

There was a slight resistance to the landing; but Phil
saw nothing of this first violence. The “ Vigilant’ had
not yet arrived inside the bay when it occurred, and, owing ©
to the wind, the rattle of musketry could not be heard
from her decks.

During the twenty-four hours which followed, Phil was
wretched, both in body and mind. The troops were
stationed near the shore, with no shelter save such as
could be found amid the stunted bushes, and the wind,
damp from its long journey over the sea, seemed as cold
as in winter.

On the morning after the embarkation word was
brought to Phil that Colonel Vaughan wished to speak
with him, and the boy went at once to the small cluster
of fishermen’s shanties where the officers of the expedi-
tion were quartered.

«We are about to make a reconnoissance, lad, and it is
my fancy to have you with me. You will be exposed to
less danger by remaining in the ranks, therefore it is a
request rather than a command.”

“JT shall be very glad to accompany you, sir,” Phil
replied, modestly. “I expected to be confronted by
danger when I enlisted as a soldier.”

“Well said, lad. See to it that you carry. all your
blankets, and return here immediately.”



30 THE BOYS OF 17465.

Phil’s heart was beating violently when he reported for
duty. One glance at the apparently impregnable fortifi-
cations had been sufficient to convince him there would be
plenty of blood spilled before victory could be won by
either party, and he was about to begin his portion of the
struggle.

Four hundred men had been drawn up in line, and
when Colonel Vaughan emerged from the huts, this body
of troops was marched directly toward the hills which
overlooked the town.

Phil was not burdened with arduous duties. He re-
mained near the commander, and from time to time per-
formed certain trifling services. It appeared very much as
if the colonel had attached the boy to his staff as an act
of kindness, rather than from the idea that he could be
of especial benefit. The troops marched as near the town
as was deemed safe, and there were ordered to salute the
enemy with three cheers, rather an odd proceeding, as
Phil thought. Then, without further demonstrations, the
command made a défour behind the hills in the rear of
Grand Battery, which was situated in such a position as to
command the entrance to the harbour, near “ extensive
magazines of naval stores.”

The men understood why they had been called out,
when orders were given to destroy all the property not
protected by the guns of the battery, and during the
remainder of the day Phil witnessed such deeds as he had
believed could never be enacted. Valuable stores were
given to the flames; buildings sacked of such ammunition



AN UNEXPECTED VISITOR. 31

as could readily be carried away, and then sacrificed, and
a spirit of wanton destruction seemed to have taken pos-
session of all.
It was a picture of war enlivened by no acts of heroism.
Not until an hour after nightfall was the work finished,
and then Colonel Vaughan believed it imprudent to return



x

to the main army, four miles distant, lest he fall into an
ambush.

The soldiers bivouacked near the ruins of the buildings,
where the heat from the glowing embers tempered the
wind to the blanketless men, and, when a portion of the
rations brought with them had been eaten, each one dis-
posed of himself for the night as best suited his fancy.

Sentinels were stationed, as a matter of course, yet
they were not so numerous but that a large body of the
enemy might have approached unobserved; and had the
occupants of the battery made a sortie at any time from



32 THE BOYS OF 1746.

midnight until morning, the surprise must have been
complete. ©

Colonel Vaughan was not lodged more comfortably
than his men. He laid down between two half-burned
timbers, at a point nearest the enemy, and a dozen yards
from him was Phil.

It was a long while before the boy’s eyes closed in .
slumber, and then it seemed as if he had but just fallen
into unconsciousness when a pressure upon his arm
aroused him. .

The fires were burning so low that but little light
illumined the darkness, and Phil felt, rather than saw,
that some one had crawled under his blanket beside
him.

The first thought was that a comrade, less generously
provided with coverings against the cold, was taking
advantage of his belongings, and he settled down for
another nap, regardless of the intruder, when a voice
whispered in his ear, —

«Don’t you know me?”

Phil sprang up in alarm, for he recognized the voice of
Dick, — Dick whom he had firmly believed was dead; but
the intruder pulled him roughly down as he whispered
fiercely, —-

“Keep quiet, or some of the sentinels will see me; I
don’t intend to give Bill Vaughan a chance to make me
prisoner again.”

«But where have you come from? How did you get
here? I thought you—”’



AN UNEXPECTED VISITOR. 33

«Believed I was dead, eh?” And, despite his danger,
Dick gave vent to an audible chuckle.

. «Every one supposed you drowned within a few mo-
ments after leaping into the water.”

«Then every one must be a fool. So long as I kept
well under the surface, I didn’t suffer from the cold. It
was when I crawled out that trouble began. I thought I
should freeze to death ”

« How did you avoid it ?”

“Kept in motion. Ran the best I knew how till I got
rid of the numbness, and you can fancy I didn’t remain
near the shore. About a mile away I struck a small hut
where a fisherman lived, and there I got thawed out. It
cost me two shillings to prevent him from taking me
back, but I would n’t have begrudged twice the amount.”

«But you were then at Canseau, and now we are near
Louisbourg.”

«You seem to have a fairly good idea of affairs, even
though you are serving under such a chuckle-head as Bill
Vaughan. We are near Louisbourg.”

«But how did you get here?”

“The fisherman is a Frenchman. He didn’t care to
remain at Canseau after the English took possession, and
made all haste to reach Louisbourg. By the expenditure
of two shillings more I was allowed to come with him.
The price was much too high, for I did my full share of
work in running the boat, and without my assistance he
never would have arrived.”

«We were told the harbour was blocked with ice.”



34 THE BOYS OF 1745.

“So it was; but we could land almost anywhere from
our dory, and once ashore on this island, I turned French-
man. I have been stationed at the Grand Battery, which
you passed yesterday.”

«Then how does it happen you are here with me.”

“Tl tell you a big secret, Phil, and if you are sharp
you can turn it to your advantage. The battery is to be
abandoned; already the men are marching out. They are
cowards, for half their number could hold it against the
crowd: Bill Vaughan has brought here; but they won’t
listen to me, and to-morrow you people can take posses-
sion.”

“How will it be of benefit to me?”

“Wait until that money-borrowing Vaughan leaves
this place, and then take possession yourself. General
Pepperrell will hear what you have done, and cannot fail
to give a handsome reward, one-half of which you must
turn over tome. That is why I run the risk to pay you
a visit to-night. If you work this matter properly there
will be more in it for us than we could get by sacking
Louisbourg, even though we entered the town in the
front ranks.”

Phil remained silent. He failed to understand the
matter as Dick apparently did. In case the battery was
to be abandoned, he was not the one who should reap the
benefit of the discovery, and just at that moment it seemed
his duty to tell Colonel Vaughan all he had heard.

Dick suspected the thoughts which were in his com-
rade’s mind, and said, threateningly, —



AN UNEXPECTED VISITOR. 35

“Don’t think you can get the credit and all the reward
at the same time. I have put myself in your power, so far
as Bill Vaughan may be able to do me an injury, but
pledge my word that you’ll never live to see Portsmouth
again if you try to play me false.”

“T haven’t any idea of trying to play you or any one
false,” Phil replied, indignantly. “I didn’t ask you to
come with the story of the abandonment of the battery,
and most likely the men will discover what has been done
as soon as daybreak. My getting a reward for reporting
what another could see as well as I is nonsense.”

“It’s sound common sense if you have courage enough
to carry it out properly. Manage to loiter behind when
the troops leave, and then go boldly into the works; I'll
see to it that a messenger is at hand to carry the joyful
tidings, and you can hold the place alone until men are
sent from headquarters to take possession. You will
make your name famous; I shall be revenged on Bill
Vaughan, for of course he will be reprimanded for not
discovering such a valuable piece of news, and both of us
will make money out of the transaction.”

“Look here, Dick,” Phil said, suddenly, as a plan for
changing the subject of the conversation occurred to him;
“do you know what risks you have taken in coming here
with a scheme to make a few shillings?”

“You mean that Vaughan may get hold of me?”

“That is also possible; but it may be a very serious
matter so far as your new friends are concerned. If they
should learn that you have been here, visiting the enemy,



36 THE BOYS OF 1746.

can’t you see what would happen? You would be con-
sidered a spy, and hanged at the shortest notice. This is
war, instead of a pleasure excursion, as we were led to
believe, and when a man or a boy either, for that matter,
is suspected of giving information to the enemy, the end
comes cruelly quick.”

“T haven't given any information,” Dick replied, with
an effort to speak calmly, but his friend understood that
he was thoroughly frightened.

«That is true; but if the French should learn of this
visit, could you persuade them that such was the fact?”

“They've got more sense than the men you are
serving.”

“That would n’t prevent them from dealing in the usual
manner with a spy. As the matter now stands, you are
liable to be arrested and shot by the English for having de-
serted in the face of the enemy, or hung by the French.”

“As you figure it, I might as well consider myself dead
already,” Dick replied, grimly, but his voice trembled per-
peetibly, despite his attempts to render it steady.

“I believe you will soon come to some violent end
unless you take a sharp turn at once. Why not give
yourself up to Colonel Vaughan now? I am certain
everything can be made right, more especially since you
bring such good news, and it will be plain sailing in the
future.”

“Do you think I would let him get hold of me again?”

“You must forget that he is a townsman whom you
have known well, and look upon him only as an officer in
the colonial forces.”



AN UNEXPECTED VISITOR. 37

“T’ll look upon him for just what he is, and nothing
more. It is easy to see that you are trying to curry favour
with the villain, and I may as well go back. Remember
this, Phil Towle, if you do not come into my scheme
for getting a reward out of General Pepperrell, you
are to hold your tongue regarding what I have told you.”

«J don’t know what I ought to do,’ Phil replied, in a
tone of perplexity.

«JT do, and if you try to get the best of me there’ll be
more trouble for you than there is in this whole business
of attempting to capture Louisbourg. Don’t dare so
much as dream of what I have said unless you are will-
ing to do exactly as I direct. J am going now, but it will
be a simple matter to get at you if there is any DG
for so doing.”

Dick began to crawl out of the blankets without rising,
and Phil, paying no attention to the threat, said, implor-
ingly, —

« Don’t run such a risk, Dick! Stay here, and I will do
my best to get you out of the scrape in which you placed
yourself by going on shore without permission.”

“You'll do nothing unless I say the word, remember
that! If you ene the slightest hint to Bill Vaughan of
what I told you—”

Dick did not conclude the threat, probably paledaea it
would be more terrifying if incomplete, and almost before
Phil was aware that he had started, the visitor was lost to
view in the darkness.



CHAPTER IIL.
A CHANCE SHOT.

ft ieaes was no possibility that Philip Towle, private,

in the colonial forces from New Hampshire, would
be able to sleep very much on this night after the destruc-
tion of the enemy’s naval stores.

That which the visitor had told him was sufficient to
drive from his mind all thoughts of everything save the
proper course to be pursued.

It appeared as if his duty as a soldier demanded that
he give the startling information to Colonel Vaughan at
once ; but he was deterred by the thought that it would
also be necessary to explain how he learned the news, in
which case Dick’s position would become more serious
than it already was.

Had it been a secret, the keeping of which might have
involved possible loss of life, he would not have hesitated ;
but it was only a question of taking possession of the bat-
tery a few hours sooner or later, and he finally decided
there could be no harm in allowing matters to remain as
they were.

Never for an instant did he entertain the idea of trying
to gain a reward, as Dick had suggested.

Not once did he close his eyes in sleep, and when the

38































Se Zi
YY,
: f

Wii fZ;
Ly






A CHANCE SHOT. Al

sun rose he was the first member of the party ready for
the duties of the day.

Eagerly he gazed toward that splendid fortification
known as the Grand Battery instantly it was sufficiently
light to see surrounding objects, and there was certainly
good reason to believe Dick had told nothing more than
the truth.

Not a man could be seen in or about the works, while
on the previous afternoon it had been possible to distin-
guish the sentinels as they paced to and fro.

Colonel Vaughan’s first act after awakening was to send
all the troops, save a dozen men, back to the shore, since
there was apparently nothing more to be done in that
vicinity.

With the small squad the colonel ate breakfast, chat-
ting cheerily with Phil, meanwhile, on indifferent topics,
and not until fully half an hour had elapsed did he show
any inclination to retrace his steps.

It seemed strange to Phil that not a single member of
the party took notice of the fact that the enemy’s senti-
nels could no longer be seen, and in the hope that some
one might note the works more particularly, he asked
several questions concerning them.

“That battery will do us a power of harm before we
succeed in reducing it,’ the colonel replied, without so
much as glancing in the direction Phil most desired. «It
is exceptionally strong, and the loss of life must neces-
sarily be great when we finally assault it, as we shall be
forced to do before the main works can be captured.”



42 THE BOYS OF 17485.

Then Vaughan talked with some of the elder members
of the party as to the route they would take in returning
to the shore, and Phil realized he must speak more plainly
if the evacuation was to be discovered.

“Colonel,” he cried, suddenly, as if his attention had
but just been attracted to the subject, “isn’t it strange
that we can’t see any sentinels this morning? They were
in full view last night.”

This proved sufficient.

All gazed intently at the frowning works, and after
some discussion, the little party moved yet nearer.

“Their flag is no longer flying!” Colonel Vaughan
exclaimed. ‘It does n’t seem possible such a strong post
could be abandoned, and yet it surely has that appear-
ance.”

It was possible there might be in this apparent evac-
uation an ambush planned, and instead of venturing
boldly inside, the colonel hired an Indian from Cape Cod,
who had accompanied the troop as guide, to make an
examination.

Ta less than five minutes after the Indian had crept
through one of the embrasures, the gate was thrown open,
and the small force took possession of the place which it
had been supposed would cost many lives in the taking.

«Can you make your way back to General Pepperrell’s
headquarters ?”” Colonel Vaughan asked Phil, shortly after
they were inside the works.

“JT do not think I should have any difficulty in doing
so, sir.”










A CHANCE SHOT. 45

«Then carry him a message, and I venture to say he
will receive no visitor to-day who brings better news.”’

He wrote hurriedly the following words :

“May it please your honour to be informed that by the
grace of God, and the courage of thirteen men, I entered
the royal battery about nine o’clock, and am waiting for
reénforcement and a flag.”

Phil started off at full speed, giving no heed to the
brambles which tore his clothes and scratched his face as
he pressed through the tangled underbrush. His only
thought was to reach headquarters as soon as possible,
that a sufficient number of men to hold the battery might
be sent before the enemy could discover how needlessly
they had been alarmed.

He arrived in good season, and when admitted to
General Pepperrell’s presence was breathing heavily from
the fatigue of the rapid and painful journey.

“You bring brave news, young sir,” the general said,
in a tone of glad surprise, after reading the brief note.
“T judge you have lost no time on the way.”

“Tt was necessary I should get here quickly, sir, for
men are needed to hold the works.”

“They shall be sent without delay, and here is some-
thing which will keep you in remembrance of this day’s
fortunate happenings.”

The general handed Phil two gold coins, a greater
amount of money than the boy had ever seen at one time
before, and was about to make some further remark
when Colonel Messerve entered, looking thoroughly mys-
tified, as he cried, —



46 THE BOVS OF 1745.

“Four boats loaded with men have left the town,
evidently bound in the direction of the Grand Battery!
Vaughan must be in that vicinity !”

Instantly all was confusion; orders were given hur-
riedly, rapidly executed, and it seemed to Phil he had not
been in camp five minutes when two hundred men were
on the double-quick to reénforce their comrades.

From where he stood, the boy could see Vaughan and
his small troop drawn up in line on the beach to oppose
the intended landing, and he had the satisfaction of watch-
ing the brave fellows hold the enemy in check until those
who had been sent in support arrived.

Colonel Vaughan returned to headquarters after Brig-
adier Waldo and his regiment were in peaceful possession-
of the battery, and Phil presented himself for duty.

“Tt will be a long while, now the city is invested,
before we shall see any more fighting, so set about put-
ting up something which will serve you as a camp. It
has been ordered that all the spare sails in the fleet be
sent ashore, with which to make tents; but I fancy a boy
like you can soon build a better shelter than they will
form. You may report to your captain that you are on
detached duty under me, and after the hut is built, let me
know.” ,

By this means Phil escaped the heavy work of aiding in
the landing of the guns and stores, which was most ar-
duous as well as dangerous, and before nightfall he had
constructed a shanty which would protect him from the
wind, if not the rain.



A CHANCE SHOT. 47

It was built of spruce boughs, with turf laid around the
sides, and was by no means the poorest of the many rude
substitutes for camps to be seen on either side of the
brook running from the hills a couple of miles southwest
of the town.

After the transports had been unladen came the labour
of dragging cannon to the spot selected for the first
battery, on Green Hill, two miles from where the stores
were landed, and this labour was excessive, as Phil had
ample opportunity to learn.

While there was nothing to be done save to make prep-

arations for bombarding the town, it. was not reasonable
that Colonel Vaughan would keep the boy on detached
duty very long, therefore he was forced to do his share of
the fatiguing work.
- During two weeks he aided in dragging the heavy
pieces of ordnance across marshy ground, so soft that it
was necessary to place them on sledges lest they should
sink beyond recovery, and to each of these rude vehicles
two hundred soldiers were harnessed with breast-straps
and rope traces.

More than once did it seem to Phil as if he could no
longer perform his share of the task, so nearly was he
exhausted; but the thought that the gold presented by
General Pepperrell was sufficient in amount to relieve his
mother of her most pressing wants served to animate
him, despite the monotony and brutish nature of the
labour.

Then, when Phil was thoroughly weary with this kind



48 THE BOYS OF 1746.

of a soldier’s life, came the welcome summons to present
himself at headquarters, where he found a squad of men
drawn up preparatory to making a reconnoissance under
the lead of Colonel Vaughan, and he soon learned he was
to accompany the party.

The purpose of the movement was to ascertain the
most advantageous spot at which an assault could be
made.

From the manner in which the leader set about the
work, it could be understood that he hoped something
more might be done than simply surveying the land, for
no man “enjoyed” a battle better than did the Lieutenant
Colonel of the New Hampshire forces, and a skirmish did
not come amiss, to his mind, when nothing more serious
was possible.

Instead of proceeding directly to the spot where Gen-
eral Pepperrell believed artillery could be used to the best
advantage, a long détowr was made, which brought the
squad on the high land north of the city, where was a
heavy growth of timber to screen them from view.

Once in this place, scrutinizing the town he hoped
would soon be captured, Colonel Vaughan gave little
heed to his men, so intent was he in gaining all the
information possible relative to the movements of the
enemy, and the soldiers were allowed to ramble here and
there at will, the only restriction being that they keep
within hailing distance of each other.

Phil and the colonel were in a dense clump of spruce
trees, and the latter was hewing off some of the branches



A CHANCE SHOT. 49

with his sword, in order to gain a better view of the
beleaguered town, when a single report rang out, sharp
and distinct, as a bullet cut the skin on the officer’s face.
For an instant both the colonel and Phil thought the
former was seriously wounded, but when the trifling
nature of the hurt was discovered, anger succeeded fear.
«Whoever discharged that musket intended to kill
me!” Colonel Vaughan exclaimed, sharply. “Hello!
Where are you, men?”
The soldiers, having
heard the report. and fancy-
ing an attack was being
made, were already com-
ing at full speed toward
their commander, and the
words had hardly been
spoken before all the squad
were within the thicket.



“Did any of you dis-
charge a musket just now?” Each denied in turn hav-
ing done anything of the kind, and showed his loaded
gun in proof of the statement.

“Tt isn’t possible one of the enemy can be outside the
city, for this portion of the island has been traversed
many times by our soldiers since we landed,” the officer
said, in a low tone, to Phil. “There’s mischief afoot, and
we must know what it is. You are to stay here with the
men, to make certain they do not leave the place, and I
will do a little reconnoitring on my own account.”



50 THE BOYS OF 1748.

“You surely don’t intend to go alone!” Phil cried, in
alarm.

«“] shall be safer than with companions. Do as I have
bidden, and take good care to keep a sharp watch on all
the men.”

The colonel disappeared’ amid the underbrush: as he
ceased speaking, and Phil tried in vain to fancy who could
have any cause of enmity against so kind an officer.

Just once did his thoughts wander to Dick Sanbourne,
but he dismissed the subject immediately, for he had good
reason to believe that young gentleman was secure behind
the walls of the city.

Colonel Vaughan was absent half an hour,.and when he
returned, the men were ordered back to headquarters,
although the purpose for which they came out had not
been accomplished.

Phil asked no questions relative to what might have
been discovered; but before the march had come to an
end, the colonel said, in a low tone, as if fearful his words .
would be overheard by those in the rear, —

«Do you want to know what I saw a short distance
from where we were standing when that shot was fired?”

“T do, unless you wish to keep it a secret.”

“Not from you, lad; for I expect you will aid me in
solving the mystery. The footprints of: a man were plain
upon the turf, and.I even saw where he rested his gun to
take aim. That wouldn’t have been so very surprising,
since we know perfectly well some one was there, but I
believe it was a member of our own regiment!”













































3
wa

a

aa

to
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A CHANCE SHOT. 53

« Why do you think so, sir?” Phil asked, in astonishment.

“Because of the footprints. I could almost swear the
boots which made them came from old Tyson’s shop.
There isn’t a cobbler in the colonies, and it goes without
saying that there are none in France who cuts such a
peculiar sole; the toe is the widest part of it.”

“But who among our men would try to kill you, sir?”

“That is exactly what I propose to find out, if possible.
When we arrive at headquarters you are to go directly to
your shanty, and wait until I come, which will probably
not be ‘ill late in the evening.”

After giving this order the colonel relapsed into a silence
: which was not broken until the command was dismissed
in front of the hut occupied by General Pepperrell.

Phil did as he had been bidden, and there remained,
listening to the roaring of the guns from the advanced
battery, wishing he was at liberty to go where he could
see what execution was being done.

At sunset no word had been received from the colonel,
and the boy built a small. fire in front of the hut with
which to cook the meal that made up his portion of ‘the
day’s rations.

The cannon were still being worked, and from time to
. time squads of men passed him on their way to watch the
gunners. More than one invited Phil to follow, but he
shook his head. The order was to remain in his camp,
and he did not intend to disobey, whatever might be the
attraction at the front.

The evening passed, and yet no word from the colonel.



54 THE BOYS OF 1746.

One by one the men off duty sought the shelter of their
poor apologies for tents, until not a person was to be seen
within Phil’s range of vision.

He piled his camp-fire high with wood, and laid down in
front of it. The earth no longer trembled under the de-
tonations of the cannon; the ‘sighing of the wind could
be heard from among the trees, and the monotonous mur- —
mur of the surf wooed the tired boy to slumber.

Then came a time when he fancied he heard in a dream
his own name called softly, but not until it had been re-
peated several times did he realize that it was a reality,
and not the result of a vision.

Once he understood this fact, he sprang to his feet,
rubbing his eyes to free them from the mist of slumber,
but there was no person to be seen.

«It must have been a dream after all, and yet it sounded
wonderfully distinct,’ he muttered to himself; and then,
observing that the fire was burning low, he began collect-
ing fuel with which to replenish it, when from his hut came
a hoarse whisper :

“Keep the fame down! Can’t you understand that I
don’t want to be seen here?”

Phil’s surprise was so great as to amount almost to be-
wilderment, for he recognized Dick Sanbourne’s voice.

«Come in, can’t you?” the invisible speaker added, in a
tone of irritation. “I don’t propose to lay around here
all night while your wits are wool-gathering.”’

Phil entered the shanty, by no means pleased to meet
his old friend again.



CHAPTER IV.
A CONFESSION.

ICK acted as if he had good cause for complaint
because Phil did not give him a hearty greeting,
and said in an injured tone, —

“You don’t seem very glad to see me!”

“Tam not.”

“You’re getting stuck up because Bill Vaughan has
taken you under his wing; that ’s what’s the matter.”

“JT didn’t know he had ‘taken me under his wing,’ as
you call it. I have tried to do my duty —’

“For which you are to get nearly a sixpence a day, if
the colony can raise money enough to pay the men who
have enlisted,” Dick interrupted, with a sneer.

«Ves, that was the amount agreed upon, and we have
no right to find fault. There has been no change in the
price since the day on which we enlisted, and then it
seemed sufficient.”

«So it-would have been had Storer’s stories turned out
true ; we were to come on a pleasure excursion, and be
paid for it. Instead, we were sent down here to be
killed.”

«There has n’t been any very great slaughter thus far.”

“Wait till the city is assaulted, and then you will see
the blood run. Louisbourg is fortified so strongly that ten

55



56 THE BOYS OF 1746.

times the number of men at Pepperrell’s command couldn’t
force an entrance.”

“T admit there is good reason for you to speak so
positively ; but tell me why you are not behind the walls
now? Did the French suspect you?”

“T never went back to find out. You said so much
about what might be done, I concluded it wasn’t safe.”

«And it would have been very dangerous, I firmly
believe. If suspicion had arisen that you had visited our
men just before the battery was abandoned, it would have
been a short shrift for you.”

“Most likely I should have pulled through all right ; but
Iam willing to confess you frightened me, and I steered
clear of both parties until hunger has driven me here.”

«Where have you been staying ?”’

“ In the woods.”

«You might have been taken by some of our men.”

“Tt’s easy to keep clear of them. I got along all
right while my ammunition held out; but now that is
gone I am on precious short allowance. Instead of ask-
ing so many questions, why not give me something to
eat? I am nearly starved.”

Phil believed, from the visitor's tone, that he was
speaking the truth, and his sympathies were aroused.

The only food he had was a portion of the hasty-
pudding made that evening; but he set it before Dick,
who ate as if he was indeed nearly famished.

“Tf I had known there was a chance you would come,
I’d saved more; but, supposing you safe inside Louis-



A CONFESSION. 57

bourg, the possibility that others might need my rations
never occurred to me. Say, Dick, do you realize that
each day makes your case worse?’

“In what way?” the visitor asked, speaking indistinctly,
because his mouth was so full of pudding.

« After it is known you have been hanging around so
long in the enemy’s service, there will be less sympathy
felt when you ask for pardon.”

“Do you think I’m going to do anything of that kind,
especially to Bill Vaughan?”

«But you must, otherwise how will you get home?”

-“«T can work that part of it all right,” was the confident
reply.

“How?”

“ There ll soon be a vessel sailing for Boston, and I shall
smuggle myself on board. The voyage won’t be so long
but that I can remain stowed away until she arrives.”

«But even then you won't dare go to Portsmouth.”

“Wouldn't 1? Just give me the chance, that’s all!”

«But don’t you fear being arrested as a deserter?”

“Bill Vaughan won’t talk so loud when we are home
again. My father can fix everything, once I am there.”

Phil believed the crime of desertion wouid not be
passed over so readily, even though Dick’s father was
reputed to be a wealthy man; but he forbore from press-
ing the matter further. It could easily be seen that the
visitor fancied anything he might do could be atoned for
with money, and it would be useless to make an attempt
to convince him to the contrary.



58. THE BOYS OF 1745.

Dick ate that which had been set before him, and then
looked around hungrily for more.

«That was all I had,” Phil said, interpreting the look.
“Tf you will wait, perhaps I can borrow something from
the man who is encamped close at hand.”

«Don’t try it!” Dick said, sharply, when Phil made a
motion to leave the shanty. “I haven’t got any too
much confidence in you, and don’t propose that word shali
be sent to Bill Vaughan.”

“J didn’t betray you before, therefore why should I do
so now?’

“JT won't give you a chance; there’s no knowing what
you might do for the sake of a pound or two out of my
capture.”

“Tam not so fond of money as that. If it was really
my duty to tell of your being on the island, I should do it
at all hazards.”

“You're a canting hypocrite—” Dick checked him-
self suddenly, as if he had spoken more plainly than was
his intention, and added, in a coaxing tone, “Look here,
Phil, we've always been friends, and you know I’m willing
to do you a good turn at any time, so now do one for
me when I am in such trouble.”

«What do you want?”

“Powder and ball. With plenty of ammunition, I can
shoot game enough to keep me alive until a vessel sails
for Boston.”

“JT have n’t got very much,” and. Phil shook his powder-
horn.



A CONFESSION. 59

«Tt ‘ll do till I come again,’ Dick said, as he stretched
out his hand for the horn. “If I had n’t wasted that shot
this afternoon I need n’t have come to-night, and, perhaps,
by a lucky turn, might have found a chance to leave this
place without your knowing anything about it.”

' Phil was on the point of handing the powder to his
companion when the latter spoke; but suddenly he drew



cause of his newly-aroused suspicions.

“What is the matter?” the visitor asked, sharply,
alarmed at the change which had come over his friend.
«What is the matter? Why don’t you speak, instead of
staring in that way?”

“Dick Sanbourne,” Phil said, in a low, accusing tone,
“it was you who tried to shoot Colonel Vaughan this
afternoon !’”

For an instant Dick acted as if about to deny the accu-

sation, and then spoke angrily :



60 THE BOVS OF 1746.

«Well, what if it was? Is that any business of yours?”

“Tt certainly is. My duty is to protect, or assist in
doing so, our officers, and —”’

“JT suppose you're running this whole war, aint you?
You protect the officers! You’d better go back to your
mother, where you belong, and not play at being a soldier
any longer. I shall settle my score with Bill Vaughan
before I leave here, and you can’t prevent me, mighty as
you act now.”

“TI shall do my best,” Phil replied, gravely, as he at-
tempted to rise to his feet.

Dick, who had been seated between Phil and the en-
trance to the shanty, sprang to his feet before the latter
could change his position, and, pushing him back with one
hand, twisted the powder-horn from his grasp with the
other.

Then, raising his musket as a club, he said in a guarded
tone, —

«Make one attempt to give an alarm, and I will strike
you down! I don’t intend to be drawn over the coals
when a blow will settle it all! Give me that!”

Before Phil had fairly recovered from the surprise
caused by the sudden change in his former friend, the
latter made a clutch at the pouch containing bullets,
which was on the ground near the bed of pine boughs.

‘Now I’ve got all I need, and can take care of myself.
I know this island better than any of these make-believe
soldiers, for I’ve been all over it, so it won’t make any
difference if you do raise an alarm. None of your crowd
can catch me, especially after dark.”



A CONFESSION. 61

Phil was not disposed to let the boy go to his own de-
struction without making one more effort to prevent it
and he said, in a kindly tone, —

“Stop, Dick, and think of what you are doing! It is
a mistake to believe your father can smooth matters over,
and by defying the whole colonial army in that way, you
cannot fail to make an outlaw of yourself. There is time
even now to take a different course.”

«“ Yes, after you know I shot at Bill Vaughan!”

« Suppose I promise never to tell what you have said?”

“Tt won't be safe to repeat the least word, remember
that!”

“Tt is my duty, and I must tell everything to-night,
unless you are willing to give yourself up. I feel certain
matters may be arranged now, if nothing is known of the
shooting, and you can take your proper place with us once
more.”

“J suppose you think you’re precious good, eh? Try-
ing to play the mighty over me because you've got on the
right side of that Vaughan! I’Il attend to my own af-
fairs, and yours, too, if you dare tell a single person that
I’ve been here!”

Then, standing over Phil to prevent him from rising,
Dick coolly loaded his musket, hung the horn and pouch
about his person, and moved slightly toward the door.

“Tf you show yourself outside this shanty for the next
hour, I’ll shoot you down,” he said, threateningly. “Ican
hide among the trees, and there’s yet light enough from
your fire for me to see if you sneak out. Keep a close



62 THE BOVS OF 1746.

tongue in your head about me and my affairs, or you'll
never reach Portsmouth again.”

Phil was too deeply engaged in thought to make any
reply to these threats. He knew it was his duty to raise
an alarm, regardless of whatever danger might threaten
him; but if he should do so, and Dick was taken prisoner,
there could be but one end to it all. To give his old
friend up would be condemning him to death without a
shadow of doubt, and that he shrank from doing.

Dick waited a few moments at the door of the shanty,
as if to assure himself he could gain the shelter of the
woods without being seen by the sentinels near the water’s
edge, and then, with a mocking “good-by,” disappeared.

«What shall I do?” Phil cried when he was alone. “If
I tell that he is on the island, the men will soon catch him,
and even though I’m not very much of a soldier, I know
full well what will be the result.” .

Then came the thought that he would confide in Colonel
Vaughan, keeping back the fact that it was Dick who
fired the shot which grazed the officer’s cheek, and plead
with him to use his influence in having the deserter
punished only by being sent home in disgrace.

This seemed the best way out of the difficulty which
Dick had brought upon himself, and Phil had but just
decided he would try the experiment when a commanding
voice was heard, apparently but a short distance from the
shanty.

« Halt, or I’ll fire!”

Then came a noise as of scuffling and the words in the
same voice:










A CONFESSION. 6 5

“Don’t make the mistake of trying that game! So, it
was you? I had just a suspicion this afternoon when I
saw your footprints. Now march ahead of me, and turn
ever so slightly to the right or the left if you wish to
die!”

It was Colonel Vaughan who had spoken, and Phil
understood Dick was a prisoner. The officer knew him.
as the would-be assassin, and, such being the case, the
deserter’s doom was indeed sealed.

Phil sat silent and motionless, sick with apprehension
regarding the boy whom he had called a friend, when
Dick and his captor entered, the former pale as death,
and the latter holding a pistol close to his head.

“JT had an idea my trap would work,” Colonel Vaughan
said to Phil, and the boy repeated, in amazement, —

«Your trap, sir?”

«Yes; I ordered you to remain here, believing this
deserter would pay you a visit if there were not too many
around.”

“How did you know he was alive?” Phil asked, in a
tremulous voice.

“J had no suspicion of it until I saw the prints of
Tyson’s shoes, and they could be explained in no other
way. Sanbourne was the only member of our regiment
missing, and I concluded, without being able to explain
how it happened, that he had contrived to save his lite.
Now call some of the men, and we’ll have him taken care
of for the night.”

Phil obeyed by going to the nearest ine and in a few



66 THE BOYS OF 1746.

moments Dick was marched away, his hands tied behind
his back to prevent the possibility of an escape.

Colonel Vaughan remained behind, and when they were
alone Phil asked, falteringly, —

«Did you know— Did you hear—”

«T saw him when he came, and waited where I could
overhear all that was said, for I wanted his own version of
the story. You should have told me he was here.”

“Jt would have been the same as condemning him to
death, sir, and I couldn’t have done that, for he and I
have always been good friends.”

“He acted particularly friendly toward you, I should
judge, from what I heard.”

“He is desperate. This soldiering is different from
what he expected it would be, and —”

«There is no reason why you should try to find excuses
for him, lad,” the officer said, as Phil hesitated. “Tell

-me when you have seen him before.”

Phil related in detail the story of Dick’s visit on the
night the battery was abandoned, and concluded by
saying, — ,

“Tf he could be made to understand how serious his
offence is, I am sure he would act differently.”

“He will probably find out when he is brought up for
trial.” ,

«Then you are to send him home?”

“There is no necessity for that. A court-martial will
soon settle the matter, and while we are in the field there
will be little chance for interference in his behalf.”



A CONFESSION. 67

«But, Colonel!” Phil cried, in an agony of fear, “you
will not suffer any harm to come—lI mean that you will
not allow him to be shot for deserting?”

«Tt is not probable I shall have any. voice in the
matter. A certain important movement will be made
soon, and I am to have charge of it. Remain here until I
send for you, and try not to distress yourself over such a
worthless character as Sanbourne has shown himself to
be.”

With this advice Colonel Vaughan left the shanty, and
Phil threw himself. face downward upon the bed in bitter-
est distress of mind.



CHAPTER V.
A NIGHT ATTACK.

T was little sleep Phil had on the night Dick was

captured. He could not drive away the fear that he
had been instrumental in bringing about the present con-
dition of affairs, although it was impossible to explain
even to himself how that could be.

Horrible visions of his friend on the scaffold rose con-
stantly before his eyes, and more than one wild scheme
for saving the misguided boy came into his mind, only to
be dismissed as impracticable.

“T would do anything, regardless of my duty as a
soldier, to save him from a shameful death,”’ he said, over
and over again; “but there is no way by which I can aid
him, except through the kindness of Colonel Vaughan,
whom he tried to kill.”

Until late on the following afternoon he was left to his
own painful reflections, and then came a messenger with
word that he was wanted at headquarters.

Almost any kind of action was preferable to remaining
idle, with no companion but the terrible thoughts which
would not be banished, and Phil hastened to obey the
summons.

It was necessary to remain outside General Pepperrell’s
quarters some time before Colonel Vaughan was ready to

68



A NIGHT ATTACK. 69

receive him, and the boy had ample opportunity to ques-
tion the sentinel on duty.

“Do you know what was done with the prisoner taken
last night ?”’ he asked, and such discipline as was enforced
in the encampment did not prevent the soldier from _halt-
ing in front of Phil as he replied by another question :

«Did you know the young scoundrel?”



“We both live in Portsmouth, and he has always been
my friend.”

“He won’t play the friend to any one much longer.”

“What do you mean?” Phil asked, the words coming
with difficulty from his trembling lips, because he knew
full well what the answer would be.

“He'll be hanged, as he deserves, of course.”

«But he’s only a boy,—a few months more than six-
teen years old.”

“Tf he wasn’t half that age the punishment would n't



7O THE BOYS OF 17485.

be any too severe. I hear he’s been over to the enemy,
and most likely has told them all he knows. Then, again,
he tried to kill Colonel Vaughan, which is good reason for
the sentence that will surely be pronounced.”

Phil remained silent several moments, during which the
soldier resumed his leisurely pacing to and fro.

Then the boy asked timidly, as he walked by the side of
the man, — }

“Don’t you think General Pepperrell will pardon him ?
It can’t be he would allow the son of one he has always
been friendly with to be hanged.” |

“Tf I believed there was any danger the young fiend
would escape death I’d shoot him down this minute!”
the soldier cried, angrily, and Phil turned away in despair.

This man’s opinion was probably shared by many, if
not all, of his comrades, and the deserter’s friend began
to understand that perhaps he was the only person in the
encampment who sympathized with the prisoner.

At this moment Colonel Vaughan appeared, and leading
the boy a few paces aside, said in a low tone, —

“Tt had been promised that I should lead an attack this
night ; but the men have stipulated for Captain Brooks
to command them, and I am forced to lose the sport or
follow as a private, therefore I cannot take you with
me.” .

«Shall you volunteer ?”

“Certainly. The plan is all my own, and I want to see
how it is carried out.”

«Then what prevents me from doing the same thing ?”’



A NIGHT ATTACK. 71

“You can if you choose, and I’ll be glad to have you.
Brooks is not the kind of a man who will take advice from
me, and we shall be obliged to follow his instructions,
whether they be wise or not; but there will be plenty of
fighting, which is what all of us need just now.”

“In what way shall I volunteer?” Phil asked, thinking
he would rather be engaged in any dangerous service than
remain in camp dwelling upon Dick’s terrible fate.

“T will attend to that part of it. We should go now,
for the expedition starts from the Grand Battery, and
there is no time to lose, if we would join the party.”

Phil was ready as soon as he replenished his supply of
ammunition, and the two set out in silence. Colonel
Vaughan was in no mood for conversation, because of his.
disappointment at not being allowed to lead the assaulting
party, while Phil could think only of his former friend.

On arriving at their destination Colonel Vaughan went
directly to Brigadier Waldo, who still remained in charge of
the battery abandoned by the French, and then it was that
Phil began to realize the danger which might be en-
countered.

« As the matter is being arranged,’ Waldo said to his
friend, “it is a foolhardy piece of business, and can only
result in disaster. I have written to the general that I
doubt most seriously whether straggling fellows, three,
four, or seven out of a company, ought to go on sucha
service, for there will be no concert of action among them.
What makes it the more foolish, is that many of them are
under the influence of liquor, and should be under guard,



72 THE BOYS OF 17465.

instead of trying to surprise a detachment of regulars
within particularly strong works.”

Then the brigadier was summoned by one of his officers
who was superintending the making ready of the boats,
and Phil asked, —

“What is the service we are going on?”

“I have proposed that an assault be made upon the
Island Battery, which commands the harbour, and pre-
vents our ships from entering. I believe the works could
be carried, but not in such a way as is to be tried.”

“ Do you still intend to accompany the party, sir?”

“Most certainly; but since matters are in the condi-
tion described by Waldo, perhaps you had better remain
behind.”

“T would prefer to go with you, sir.”

«Very well, then, we’ll say no more about it. Stay
here where I can find you without difficulty, and I'll take

-a turn around the battery.”

Three hours later Phil saw the colonel again, and the
moment had arrived for departure. It was so dark when
he stood on the beach that he could not decide how many
boats were to be used to transport the soldiers, but in the
gloom it appeared as if there must have been at least
twenty. /

He followed the colonel into one of them, which already
appeared overloaded, and the frail craft was paddled,
instead of rowed, out over the wind-swept waters, the
boisterous waves dashing over her gunwale every few
seconds, obliging the men to bail incessantly in order to
keep her afloat.









A NIGHT ATTACK. 75

Then came the dangerous work of disembarking while
the surf was dashing high upon the rocks on either side
of the narrow cove, and when about half the force were
on shore; they broke the silence by three cheers, regard-
less of the fact that they had come for the purpose of
surprising the enemy.

“ That settles the fate of this attempt,’ Colonel Vaughan
said, in a low, angry tone to Phil. «I cannot understand
what Brooks is thinking of to let the men announce their
presence when he is not prepared for the attack!”

Before a reply could have been made to this remark a
sudden glare illumined the darkness in the immediate
vicinity of the battery, and from out of it came a perfect
hail of iron missiles. It seemed to Phil as if every living
thing on that narrow strip of shore must be mowed down
by the shower of balls and bullets, yet he himself re-
mained untouched after the deadly fire had continued
several seconds.

Finally, high above the roaring of the heavy guns, could
be heard the command of Captain Brooks for his men to
advance, and Colonel Vaughan cried to Phil, —

“Tt is little less than suicide, lad; but we must not be
the ones to show the white feather. It is simply a
slaughter of the men, without possibility of success; yet
we are bound to obey orders.”

After the first fush of fear Phil forgot the danger, and
eager to prove to the officer who had shown him so much
kindness that he was not a coward, pressed boldly
forward, stumbling here over the bodies of the fallen, or



76 THE BOYS OF 1745.

making a a@étour there to avoid a group who were
shooting at the stone walls, regardless of their ‘com-
mander’s orders.

Phil was at the very foot of the works, where scaling-
ladders were being raised, and had already begun to
ascend oné when a bright flash burst directly in his eyes;
there came a sudden sensation of numbness, and all was a
blank.

When next he was conscious, an intense pain asserted
itself in his left shoulder; it seemed as if his clothing had
been glued to that portion of his body, and he was rising
and falling as though suspended in mid-air.

«Where am 1?” he asked, feebly, surprised that it was
not possible to speak louder.

«With a dozen or more nearly as badly wounded as
yourself, heading for our own side of the harbour,” a
voice replied.

«Am I wounded?”

«That you are, and badly, so I’m told. I’ve lost part
of one foot, but ¢#az’s a hurt I shall soon get over.”

Phil fancied the man intended to convey the idea that
he might not recover, and he mildly wondered whether
death in such a form would be painful.

“You can thank Colonel Vaughan that you’re here,
instead of being left on the beach at the mercy of the
enemy. He it was who lugged you on his back through
the surf, when it was all a man could do to care for
himself, much less come off hampered with a burden.”

“Ts the colonel safe ?’’ Phil asked, after a brief silence.



A NIGHT ATTACK. 77

« Ay, that he is, and in one of the other boats. If he
had had command of this expedition, I’m thinking we
would n’t be crawling back like disabled crabs, leaving
behind half of those who started out with us.”

«Then it has all been a failure?”

“Yes, so far as the Island Battery is concerned, and
weak leadership killed the only chance we had of taking
it; but the city will fall into our hands some day, please
God, and I’ll have given one foot toward the general
result, though it seems a wicked waste of flesh and blood
to give them up in such a foolish attack as this has
proved to be.”

Phil heard the last words but faintly; the pain of his
wounds was rapidly overcoming him, and before the boat
with her cargo of suffering humanity gained the land he
was unconscious again.

When he next realized anything, he heard a strange
voice say, —

“He may pull through, with youth and strength on his
side; but it will be a narrow squeeze. Do not attempt to
move him, and in forty-eight hours we shall know the result.”

Phil was lying on a softer bed than he had enjoyed
since leaving home, and without touching those portions
of his body which were causing him so much pain, he
knew the wounds had been bandaged.

Once he fancied Colonel Vaughan bent over him, laying
a cool hand on his burning head ; but it was impossible to
distinguish either word or action very clearly. He was in
a stupor not unlike a disagreeable dream.



78 THE BOYS OF 1748.

At times the pain seemed overpowering, and then he
would sink into what might have been a ‘swoon, only to
arouse suddenly to the knowledge ‘that’ he had : ‘been se-
riously wounded, — was, perhaps, dying.» ~ -

He was in a log hut, which evidently contained two
apartments, and in front of the inner door” a | soldier stood,
as if on guard.

It was day when he understood. this: much, and he
believed but a few hours after - the. disastrous. attack had
been made. a

When next he took note of his surroundings, another
night had come. Only he and the sentinel. were in the
room, and he wondered why a guard should be there.

He moved slightly, and the a oe quickly to
his side. :

« Are you here to take care of me?” Phil whispered,
and the man shook his head.-

“I’m on duty to make certain oe young deserter
don’t slip through our fingers ae and the sentinel
pointed toward the door.

Instantly he understood it all. Dick was confined in
the next room, and since the hut had not been built
strongly enough for a prison, a guard was stationed over
him. :

“Do you think they will punish him?” he next asked.

“That they will! Bless you, it has all been: settled in
proper order. When the sun rises again eu won't be
troubled by having a sentinel here.” aby s

During a moment Phil believed he was on the point of



A NIGHT ATTACK. . 79

swooning once more. “When the sun rises again!”
That was as much as if the man had said when another
day dawned Dick Sanbourne would pay the extreme
penalty for his misdeeds !

The wounded boy struggled desperately to resist the
sensation of faintness which was creeping over him. He
believed it was absolutely necessary to retain possession
of all his faculties, although he had no idea that it might
be possible for him to aid the condemned prisoner.

When. the sentinel took up his station by the door
again, Phil began to wonder why. it was the trial and
sentence had followed so quickly. He knew nothing had
been done in that way when he left headquarters with
Colonel Vaughan, and yet the entire matter seemed to be
settled.

It was a long while before he managed to whisper, -——

«When did —did Dick have his trial ?”’

«The day before yesterday.”

«Why, it was then we made the attack.”

“You've lost run of the days, lad, that’s all.”

“ How long have I been here ?”’

“You were wounded Monday night, and to-morrow is
Saturday.” .



CHAPTER VL
AN APPEAL,

RIEVOUSLY wounded though he was, Phil forgot
his own suffering as he thought of the mental
agony which the unhappy prisoner must be enduring.

It was almost maddening to realize that he was power-
less to stay the sentence of the military court,—that a
boy, who until lately had been his friend, would soon be
executed.

For an instant he resolved to demand an audience with
General Pepperrell, in order to beg for pardon; but a brief
time of reflection was sufficient to convince him that the
general would not listen to his prayer against the judg-
ment of his officers.

Could Colonel Vaughan effect anything? Phil doubted
if that were possible, or, being so, whether he would
make an effort to save the life of one who had tried to
murder him. ,

The sentinel, at a loss to account for his sudden silence,
drew nearer the couch to look at the wounded boy.

«What time is it?” he asked of the man.

“Tt lacks about half an hour of midnight, when I shall
be relieved.”

«Would you do me a favour?”

«Of course I would, lad! I’m told you showed true

So



AN APPEAL. 8I

grit at the assault when the odds were all against our
side, and I’m not the only one who is proud of what you
have done.”

«“T want to speak with the prisoner a moment. He
and I are old friends; we came from the same town; I
cannot bear to think of his being led away to a cruel
death’ before I have had a chance to say good-by.”

«1 don’t know why you shouldn’t go in,” the sentinel
said, thoughtfully, “though it won’t be a very pleasant
visit. The doctor might think you oughtn’t to move
around so much, for he said it wouldn’t be safe to
carry you to Colonel Vaughan’s quarters, and he is
lodged but a short distance away.”

“Tt can do me no harm, — surely not as much as lying
here eating my heart out with sorrow for the poor fellow,”
and Phil made one attempt to rise, but fell back utterly
exhausted with the faint effort.

«That young villain isn’t worth a thought from you,”
the soldier said, emphatically, as in his rude way he tried
to move the invalid’s head to a more comfortable position.

“You wouldn't say so if he was an old friend of
yours.”

“« Perhaps not, lad, perhaps not. It don’t stand to
reason you’re hardened to such things yet; but you soon
will be if you continue soldiering.”

“I must go to see him,” Phil cried, and again he
attempted unsuccessfully to move.

“Come, come, we can’t have anything more like that,”
the sentinel said, in what he intended should be a sooth-



82 THE BOVS OF 1745.

ing tone. ‘Another struggle and you’ll set the blood to
flowing. It would be the price of your life to walk from
here to where he is.”

“TI can’t help it; I’m determined to go if such a thing
be possible. Most likely it’s my last chance.”

« But I won’t allow you to take the risk,” and now the
soldier spoke sternly. “That fellow isn’t worth the pain
you’re enduring through him, and I'll put a stop to it.”

«Do you mean you won't let me go where he is?”

«T’ll bring him here. I reckon it isn’t jest what a

sentinel oughter do; but if you’re bent on seeing. him, it
shall be done. I’ve had no orders agin it, and will be
bound there ain’t the least show of his getting away while
I stand at the door.”
_ The man did not wait for Phil to reply, but went at
once to the inner room, and the invalid trembled with
excitement as he waited for his comrade who was so soon
to be put to death. ,

The interview was not long delayed.

Phil could hear a confused sound, which he fancied was
caused by the efforts of the soldier to remove the fetters
from the prisoner’s limbs, and then Dick appeared.

Had he seen him anywhere else Phil would not have
recognized him as the lad who sailed from Portsmouth in
the good sloop “ Vigilant.”

He no longer walked erect, with head. carried well
back, as if glorying in his youth and strength, but was
bent, like an old man, while on every feature of his face.
was written the story of most abject terror.



AN APPEAL. 83

“Oh, Phil! Phil!” he cried, coming forward as fast as
the soldier would permit, and throwing himself down by
the wounded boy’s side.“ Does it seem possible that they
have the right to kill me! Save me, Phil! Save me!
I know you can, because every one is telling how brave
you have been!”

“Poor Dick! Poor Dick!” and Phil laid his hand on



the boy’s head. “It is hard, oh, so hard! but I can do
nothing. No one would listen to me.”

“There is not another person here who will speak for
me, and you mast do something! I can’t die now! I
can’t, Phil, and I haven't a friend left, for every one thinks
death is only what I deserve.”

“There’s no use in going on that way,” the sentinel
said, gruffly. “You won't do yourself any good, and I
sha’n't allow you to make Phil worse by such outcries.



84 THE BOYS OF 1745.

You should have thought of all this back there at Can-
seau, where you set up in opposition to all hands.” ,

“J didn’t think they would dare to kill me.”

« And because of not thinking, many another person
has got himself into trouble. If there’s anything you
want to say privately to Phil, go ahead; I’ll give you one
chance, though I’ve precious little sympathy for you, by
going near the door where I sha’n’t overhear what’s said.
You must talk fast, though, for the relief will be coming
soon.”

The soldier stepped back near the outside door, and,
leaning over the wounded boy, Dick continued in whispers
to beg him to save his life. ,

It was most distressing to Phil. Gladly would he have
given anything, — everything, simply to soothe the dis-
tracted prisoner, yet there was nothing he could say.

After his first outburst Dick appeared to grow calmer,

and whispered, cautiously, —

“Except for the fact that I am tied hand and foot, I
could have escaped at almost any time within the last two
days. Couldn’t you give me one chance, Phil? Just
think how horrible it will be to die in such a way! Can't
you make up your mind to help me?”

«What could I do, Dick?”

“ There must be a chance between now and daylight to’
untie the ropes —I only ask you to untie one! I can get
through the side of the hut, where a couple of logs are
loose.”

« But even then what would you do?”



AN APPEAL. 85

“J don’t know, Phil. Hide in the woods till the troops
" leave; it would be better to starve there than be hanged
like a dog to-morrow morning.”

«“T reckon you two had best be parted now; there’s no
use spending a long time when it must come at last, and
the sooner this thing is ended the better for both,” the
sentinel said, gruffly, as he came toward the bed.

Phil had just time before the man forced Dick away to
whisper in the despairing boy’s ear, —

“Tf there’s the least chance for me to do what you
want, I will, and watch as anxiously as you would for the
opportunity.”

Then the prisoner was led back; the ropes fastened
once more around his limbs, as Phil fancied from the
sound, and the sentinel returned to his post.

The invalid closed his eyes, that he might the better
think of what he had promised, and while he was thus
apparently resting comfortably, the sentinel who was to
guard the condemned until the last moment arrived.

The two men spoke together in low tones a few seconds,
and then he who had been so kind took his departure.

Unless an opportunity to assist Dick should occur
within three hours it would be too late, and Phil realized
that he must be fully alive to everything around him. A
short time previous it had been impossible to so much as
raise his head; but now he was resolved to get into the
next room, if he could do so secretly, even though at the
cost of his own life.

The sentinel looked in at the prisoner; paced. to and



86 THE BOYS OF 1748.

fro from one door to another, and then seated himself near
the invalid’s bed.

Watching eagerly from beneath his half-closed lids, Phil
saw the man nod from time to time, and it was evident he
was doing his best to fight off the inclination to slumber.

Finally he seemed to realize that it would be impossible
to keep his eyes open while in this position, for he leaped
suddenly to his feet, and began walking back and forth
energetically.

Ten minutes passed in this exercise, and then the
soldier drew from his pocket a pipe and knife.

« Blest if I’ve got so much as a crumb of tobacco,’ he
muttered, after searching his pockets carefully. “I can’t
stay here all night without a smoke !”

Glancing first at the door of the room in which the
prisoner was confined, and then toward the wounded boy,
the sentinel stood irresolutely in the centre of the apart-
ment while one might have counted twenty.

«There's no risk in going, for this boy is too weak to
help himself, and the other is tied where he can’t do
more ’n wink. There’s precious little danger of meeting
an officer around the encampment at this time of the
night ; all hands of ’em like their comfort too well to turn
out when there’s no particular reason for so doing.”

Leaving his gun leaning against the wall, he went out
into the night, and the opportunity so ardently desired by
Phil had come.

When the sound of the soldier’s footsteps died away in
the distance, the invalid raised himself slowly, battling








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AN APPEAL. 89

most desperately against the deathly faintness which
‘threatened to overcome him, and stood swaying from
side to side like one who has received a mortal blow.

Twice did he make the attempt before gaining the
door, and then he lurched into the room where Dick lay,
unable to guide his own steps.

How he succeeded in unfastening the ropes he never
knew ; but finally, he was dimly conscious of the fact that
it had been done, and made a supreme effort to regain the
bed.

He realized, or thought he did, that the prisoner
thanked him fervently, and promised sacredly he should
never regret having given him a chance for life; but the
-words were more like a murmur of the sea, which even
then was beating against the rocky coast to give warning
of a fast-gathering storm.

From that instant the thunder of all the guns which
had been hurling death and destruction into the doomed
city would not have been heard by him.

When the sentinel returned with the tobacco which had
seemed so necessary to his comfort, Phil was lying on the
bed with the blood flowing from his mouth, apparently
dead.

More than once had the doctor stated that the invalid
might die suddenly of hemorrhage, and the frightened
sentinel believed the predictions were fulfilled.

Without stopping to look in upon the prisoner, he ran
with all speed for the physician, and the moment for
Dick’s escape had arrived.



go THE BOYS OF 1745.

When Phil next opened his eyes to the things of this
world he was lying on such a bed as he had never
dreamed of before, in a room bright with gay hangings,
and bearing everywhere the marks of a woman’s hand.

By the side of the bed sat Colonel Vaughan, who was
regarding the pale, wasted boy with something very like
affection, as he said, triumphantly, —

“JY knew, under Madame Pinchon’s motherly care, you

- would recover, even though the doctor did insist you must
surely die!”

«What has happened?” Phil asked, in a tone so low
that it was hardly more than a whisper.

“Many things, my boy, which it will give you nies
to hear, the most important being that the city was. sur-
rendered nearly a week ago, and you are now quartered in
the home of a certain Antoine Pinchon, whose lodger I also
am. lation, and General Pepperrell sent a purse of money to your
mother, which will relieve her of all pecuniary troubles
for some time to come. Finally, you have been acting
the part of a dead boy for nearly three weeks, and it is
high time you began to assume the bearing of a live one.”

Phil waited to hear more, but the colonel leaned back
in his chair as if his budget of news was exhausted.

“Do you know anything about,—is Dick alive?”

“Look here, my boy, do you chance to know anything
of his escape?”

“T helped him, and want to make a confession to. the
general.”



AN APPEAL. gt

«“T suspected you had a hand in the matter, and advise °
you to remain silent on the subject. No good can come
of making any confession, and the least said is the

soonest mended. It may interest you to know, however,
that he has left the island.”

“ How did you learn that?”
“One of the natives told me he had seen ‘the boy







skulking in the woods, and I took it upon myself to find
an opportunity for him to sail. His death would have
done no good; the soldiers are so undisciplined that the
execution would not have been a lesson in the truest
sense, and after his painful experience he may mend his
ways.” .

Then the colonel told the story of the siege and final
surrender of the city in all its details, and concluded by



Q2 THE BOYS OF 17468.

stating that Phil was to be sent home in the next vessel
that sailed after he was sufficiently strong to undertake,
the journey.

Parkman writes:

“The news that Louisbourg was taken reached Boston at one
o’clock in the morning of the 3rd of July, by a vessel sent express.
A din of bells and cannon proclaimed it to the slumbering
townsmen, and before the sun rose, the streets were filled with
shouting crowds. At night every window shone with lamps, and
the town was ablaze with fireworks and bonfires. The next
Thursday was appointed a day of general thanksgiving for a
victory believed to be the direct work of Providence. New York
and Philadelphia also hailed the great news with illuminations,
ringing of bells, and firing of cannon.

“In England the tidings were received with astonishment and
joy that was dashed with reflections on the strength and mettle of
colonists supposed already to aspire to independence. Pepperrell.
was made a baronet, and Warren an admiral. The merchant
soldier was commissioned colonel in the British Army; a regiment
was given him, to be raised in America and maintained by the king,
while a similar recognition was granted to the lawyer, Shirley.”

Goold writes :

“ Beside being honoured with knighthood, General Pepperrell was
presented by the Corporation of London with a dinner service and
a silver side-table on which to display it. To my knowledge, there
is no published description of this numerous table service, or the
table which was made to bear it. At the time of its arrival at
Kittery Point, there was, probably, no set of plate in New England
approaching it in extent or elegance.”

Not until thirty years had elapsed did Phil hear of or
see Dick.



CONCLUSION. 93

Then he was a captain in the Continental Army, on the
staff of the commander-in-chief, and visited Cambridge on
military business, when he was surprised at being ac-
costed familiarly by a private soldier belonging to a regi-
ment from Connecticut. It was Richard Sanbourne,
who, since his escape from the colonial forces in front of
Louisbourg, had lived an upright, honest life, and now, as
he explained to Captain Towle, was trying to redeem
himself as a soldier.

THE END.



“23h 39855





a

seen





Isrts





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aef48c9d0f7eeed8b7e3b763da8a5415
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'2011-11-08T01:21:04-05:00'
describe
'4377' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABBL' 'sip-files00010.pro'
3384dc51587063d762b362220bd4fefc
93b6f24134c935c0eb1e55488e53e9c6ec405311
'2011-11-08T01:20:27-05:00'
describe
'4851' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABBM' 'sip-files00010.QC.jpg'
0d8cffcb3f926fcbea9bbeafd0d46a97
3bd497f786a89cbdab7ad258e70cf0f5a5991d49
'2011-11-08T01:21:32-05:00'
describe
'3595120' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABBN' 'sip-files00010.tif'
8c04b289162746d9365f961d52afaddf
15723fb624860171b85d7b5cd97c354448b68deb
'2011-11-08T01:20:39-05:00'
describe
'327' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABBO' 'sip-files00010.txt'
6cd5d6fea25d3307f48c0eea0be3226d
f8be3ccef776d5cfabfa7c7018bac3b882be2a4d
'2011-11-08T01:19:14-05:00'
describe
'1570' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABBP' 'sip-files00010thm.jpg'
619a1a3c66dfbd05005947732261623d
809fc95adcabd39975512882925651f5b69628cd
'2011-11-08T01:19:36-05:00'
describe
'448574' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABBQ' 'sip-files00011.jp2'
60d4cb3718442b98fd2b20369c37bfc5
1935e595d537076dd2c0b26cf5ab096c05a6b9e7
'2011-11-08T01:19:57-05:00'
describe
'24031' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABBR' 'sip-files00011.jpg'
81109435aa7a6e0679d2bf1e8c4febd5
e64d6900d569eeaebdf918106fc211032f56f468
describe
'9259' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABBS' 'sip-files00011.pro'
d03e7d47232507894f6f1d69d28dec8d
880cd67b960670f4402a930ff84af344e9dc34b7
describe
'7646' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABBT' 'sip-files00011.QC.jpg'
cc3d973c0c49657645bb297bddee234a
0b95521b740b592e805c566d36b94c22408b29ca
'2011-11-08T01:20:59-05:00'
describe
'3595388' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABBU' 'sip-files00011.tif'
c818fa3adc224a4a148c4717c2248936
d00c7f3a18a3dcdecca72c7f763b9c84432137b8
'2011-11-08T01:20:56-05:00'
describe
'548' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABBV' 'sip-files00011.txt'
ba88643deac7f9fc9f39b3fb3374d0ed
e6e273c1d9fae53d832c8ec6e74ebfd7a72a0392
describe
'2262' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABBW' 'sip-files00011thm.jpg'
88059f94a6696694898b32128f22b265
d62c8f394175c6ca6bf05fb6f4499147855517e1
'2011-11-08T01:19:55-05:00'
describe
'274543' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABBX' 'sip-files00012.jp2'
4e783ed350418b3b250080dcac59eccc
f3b83ee9e3e522d5913a72ac565474ca80af9c64
'2011-11-08T01:21:21-05:00'
describe
'10098' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABBY' 'sip-files00012.jpg'
a9b959118c63ce838f84887643ae7daf
d5c3a806c9f637743e13aa3ecc5f68c7f0de2a2e
'2011-11-08T01:20:08-05:00'
describe
'2752' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABBZ' 'sip-files00012.QC.jpg'
0281108b850f4dd45f20f2c266573aa2
54b962619a47e1b7ef23200f45f9605038a3ab7a
'2011-11-08T01:19:49-05:00'
describe
'3594900' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABCA' 'sip-files00012.tif'
01a4450975194ba06954532eae5924ef
ff49e4335ad5d9528d4da4f837594a9f390369da
'2011-11-08T01:19:40-05:00'
describe
'952' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABCB' 'sip-files00012thm.jpg'
366b502514aa56653be6472f31c6eaf4
a970765af6df652d71230e25ee228bfe21ed2a41
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABCC' 'sip-files00013.jp2'
c63c6be5ed0144c26e5938aca7edded1
adf62fd5575524207695bc1e8c33c21a9b24de46
describe
'42226' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABCD' 'sip-files00013.jpg'
36bccefab8556f167d79ea9e6988d1d9
97a45aec57343e1d136127d7e7be72eff3660414
'2011-11-08T01:20:46-05:00'
describe
'20748' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABCE' 'sip-files00013.pro'
f5f52fc6a252c2b59b54d4e85fde7722
e849f1a0f48f6b835602968e8a6f64188230e3b8
'2011-11-08T01:19:04-05:00'
describe
'14086' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABCF' 'sip-files00013.QC.jpg'
f10a87786e93f0cfab41810deff2bbb8
5e83cf86a85fb825d95edd0f97d37c9e255b95a1
'2011-11-08T01:19:33-05:00'
describe
'3595848' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABCG' 'sip-files00013.tif'
4a16924c036d18092012867750d940ad
d08f82a2cb69cd00cd166f0362005a1af3e2c00f
'2011-11-08T01:19:23-05:00'
describe
'1039' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABCH' 'sip-files00013.txt'
b154464841885d32c390d702a1c6fea8
bdc9bab08c4b8d39a6b626f5483001adcf0b2b80
describe
'3761' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABCI' 'sip-files00013thm.jpg'
946daf99ec503fe82f77f0744aff5343
4a2b0c03abbe54ea8b977f5d7dbe47498af84cbe
describe
'378814' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABCJ' 'sip-files00014.jp2'
fef67fa99b58b4b06887079a4ffa5a73
3300a1bb08508c313e6d5f2aeafa6d81b95422ae
describe
'11451' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABCK' 'sip-files00014.jpg'
8f5c03af34cd11d6b19e134609312f0f
b9d55db50ff3b50450462f19f27eb56f982785c0
describe
'3220' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABCL' 'sip-files00014.QC.jpg'
2e8ae5935d4db8755bc43fd6b7b9b444
e29c65ed50a816f1f7051385ff3963fb2103d18b
'2011-11-08T01:21:16-05:00'
describe
'3594964' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABCM' 'sip-files00014.tif'
a0d07e5c76fb2b107082afbff5a8f8b2
943233f4e942d95ea9e7429bf8980fa5e4440f75
'2011-11-08T01:21:10-05:00'
describe
'1098' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABCN' 'sip-files00014thm.jpg'
9815c07482a3f1a0205bab926b2d63dc
06daa86ae243d6bd960565ec70a3eba095968c3c
'2011-11-08T01:21:26-05:00'
describe
'448495' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABCO' 'sip-files00015.jp2'
75fb54c0455e0ce654a5e74f7ccc1d3e
ac42e3239de79c07838e7393a8f7ef21f3b79033
'2011-11-08T01:19:59-05:00'
describe
'69378' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABCP' 'sip-files00015.jpg'
e51fefc54b7f9835566e2ceac1c99f75
1fa970ea64668c088e7d7574fb1a3152abd00f23
describe
'24370' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABCQ' 'sip-files00015.pro'
0375699094dcf7be620a2d833413dcd3
710dfac19e63321e5a20bdb8ae004376e7c77483
describe
'22673' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABCR' 'sip-files00015.QC.jpg'
67bc70f32ef4bd59a7aab6529c0b4fc5
19823425dbe4e36d23a1eed1f17df160353a1fc4
'2011-11-08T01:19:07-05:00'
describe
'3596632' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABCS' 'sip-files00015.tif'
511348916879b622d84836db96b49f85
acebcd475604649ae7ecad19de42e841d84d3b13
describe
'1151' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABCT' 'sip-files00015.txt'
75c2944ec65795c63009de02b3806210
26ccd1da5088cd6b3530f3bddbb87dde7bce1a7f
describe
'5487' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABCU' 'sip-files00015thm.jpg'
a873fab7b9e996ece76cd7139fb51345
fb250ad3b95922dec1465446db336816c53a6348
describe
'429381' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABCV' 'sip-files00016.jp2'
fec529ea3b070dad39cbad90a615638c
1c708dcad268829d55617fb4523119aa4fcc6289
'2011-11-08T01:19:38-05:00'
describe
'100745' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABCW' 'sip-files00016.jpg'
3b85635d90810fc9656cca7dc22b5d17
4a30fced27ccdb87de3e9e1a10cfd748e86a656d
describe
'34984' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABCX' 'sip-files00016.pro'
7031601d39319e76579061e1953d50ae
3a7255eb54298785eda31e22d4dd03089d6382fe
'2011-11-08T01:19:44-05:00'
describe
'32250' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABCY' 'sip-files00016.QC.jpg'
c1f962e849457e684bc943058bd14d6c
703b9737da72e7a0a2372d36998b54d98da53703
describe
'3443596' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABCZ' 'sip-files00016.tif'
74c9203cffd7fe2c0e5b09a44872d118
701da067d4c58507bca69757631f42eef688c2c2
describe
'1397' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABDA' 'sip-files00016.txt'
21c34bcd30c8702a31b54bc986efc70f
6dea59354c5cdb3a799a35c3a2ad31c590c092c0
'2011-11-08T01:20:31-05:00'
describe
'8199' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABDB' 'sip-files00016thm.jpg'
38b35991a06ed581d5802c63b2c877c5
98f6141d25e90a72e8b61cc1ccc5c3dcb09f4996
describe
'429373' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABDC' 'sip-files00017.jp2'
ad4710bbdab797a79dae94abeadc88bf
fe0680af9c0621e18f170903ad7877ae0fec2e95
'2011-11-08T01:19:39-05:00'
describe
'94839' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABDD' 'sip-files00017.jpg'
44f87debb8efbcb007197f4adadd141a
30e83e65141d3d069671e23a064d5cf5e9c03dd1
'2011-11-08T01:21:35-05:00'
describe
'33816' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABDE' 'sip-files00017.pro'
c15c57dd746e33c3d4f3e74281d301de
eefaf9d2bd02a07cede192873c34bfcb8bb23e8b
'2011-11-08T01:20:43-05:00'
describe
'30090' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABDF' 'sip-files00017.QC.jpg'
dac8ba4300665b5e95e8301cff1025b3
8c02ae3dcb77f988bb0d4862233b1d0ea33a0565
'2011-11-08T01:20:05-05:00'
describe
'3443468' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABDG' 'sip-files00017.tif'
5fc05ee96187eeda63802d2434346ef6
3df05d8e90e69994c98e32d454e58da328d7d3ae
'2011-11-08T01:19:22-05:00'
describe
'1357' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABDH' 'sip-files00017.txt'
234a474ad7099196a8f1a97711b57fef
81277708a3ca3b1922b0291b9492dfac8284fe2a
'2011-11-08T01:21:03-05:00'
describe
'7796' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABDI' 'sip-files00017thm.jpg'
732a4145cd4f34f47f67b29b21959153
8a1cd917b611bcf48f1b47454e7ede1c0dd0316d
describe
'448534' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABDJ' 'sip-files00018.jp2'
184dd205e83b3d943775059cbd4d9b0b
93fe37ccfc28c77cbcf6d8643609f731ee616827
describe
'102499' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABDK' 'sip-files00018.jpg'
60ba3fc365963895eb5fb1cfce19260d
da52fd1999c15c0d3506d3cc4c719c68627d341f
'2011-11-08T01:21:44-05:00'
describe
'17710' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABDL' 'sip-files00018.pro'
84d3edd1d637276ac9a5e24081acb471
e8f02123c8da00a9f2206ded190c65b553a886b1
'2011-11-08T01:21:43-05:00'
describe
'28753' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABDM' 'sip-files00018.QC.jpg'
2c8cf19c74b7c8e3fc1249a5d14628bd
30766d3735deddade6d39a4662c2b09d67a558aa
describe
'3597300' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABDN' 'sip-files00018.tif'
6d789b485faeec617f6265f1c4585517
f48e41124cb002bcfadc0e876c48e98c2aa906d7
'2011-11-08T01:20:54-05:00'
describe
'696' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABDO' 'sip-files00018.txt'
03e78fab883707e6068578d12f5cfaaf
c163caf91ba97c948958aded706256eccc128b9c
'2011-11-08T01:21:05-05:00'
describe
'7225' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABDP' 'sip-files00018thm.jpg'
ee5e64efc72d20df13c9ae47a6d05297
4e4513da39420498277e91145fb61b94e17fcb13
'2011-11-08T01:20:01-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABDQ' 'sip-files00019.jp2'
0e86211315cd90a97fc630cc9071ae4e
359ee71c8d5a0dc59629e86514368b42770e0811
'2011-11-08T01:21:34-05:00'
describe
'107855' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABDR' 'sip-files00019.jpg'
4affb98f0cc5b0382dfac6affdeee64c
e10c37acd2ae9fcf678f9b853f10be964c5b74ab
'2011-11-08T01:21:49-05:00'
describe
'40492' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABDS' 'sip-files00019.pro'
7e5f79b6d1b1afda152f9a238728d238
bee0790d19003a78e97ac041fbbc44db7323e638
describe
'34544' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABDT' 'sip-files00019.QC.jpg'
78ee84b82a9bb54c00c79f04f8f66186
c4af2a0c3a6381436629e2180ccba6e8cbb5d1c1
describe
'3597132' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABDU' 'sip-files00019.tif'
6e02d5602197f23fc822c59ae0963382
3c75227a10afda17e2949e0be2ea7509db33b1f4
'2011-11-08T01:19:09-05:00'
describe
'1602' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABDV' 'sip-files00019.txt'
e435a551f1803a86ad4334d017ca9690
71a95ee2e52e0688b579b8d73a3353835800bb7e
'2011-11-08T01:19:15-05:00'
describe
'8067' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABDW' 'sip-files00019thm.jpg'
72e0aadbd5900f2e711c03b2364d28f2
4fb94309d931b1a66f5bd7f3aee607791d3366cf
'2011-11-08T01:19:32-05:00'
describe
'448570' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABDX' 'sip-files00020.jp2'
d155eb45373774d366c1db149c2d7eba
017949d1b8a929bdd3dcbde224ebdd2cbed1e620
describe
'104521' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABDY' 'sip-files00020.jpg'
dc294a94023100634035e568eea73fe3
57366b61272d7cd441d1e975fea4b14731dbbdfd
describe
'41072' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABDZ' 'sip-files00020.pro'
22b5a3b0a191bbdf54a297681894528f
358ed8b54350b6143cf0cfbdef8e58efd39c6155
describe
'33206' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABEA' 'sip-files00020.QC.jpg'
8ef72bd1c1a283aafa88fe176ef99430
069028b9cd380f48f0a1a850fe8d9ba42d8e0bc3
'2011-11-08T01:21:08-05:00'
describe
'3597104' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABEB' 'sip-files00020.tif'
5bee51042199f6553c3cc3e9dccc212f
d413412eadf667162b0623843afa3180a11c5a1a
'2011-11-08T01:19:20-05:00'
describe
'1619' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABEC' 'sip-files00020.txt'
86ff7fca6f651be10219526d619ae694
79c7b8568bcfb6437eb47318db830312058470fb
describe
'7753' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABED' 'sip-files00020thm.jpg'
00d23e4104bea8aefcb0bd03a05dc0bc
90062fd96a10c02494bbdcfd7346109624c4d6e6
describe
'426304' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABEE' 'sip-files00021.jp2'
6fb2400d1bc53d67c4b02415858800fd
643c0ac2ea5ed1d96a0634af7b95403be26f572e
'2011-11-08T01:20:00-05:00'
describe
'103403' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABEF' 'sip-files00021.jpg'
bbf88f4c1449baf72b91cb23b7c68f22
583461c24eb6775a443c3eeedf00e3c4c935e1f3
'2011-11-08T01:19:08-05:00'
describe
'36520' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABEG' 'sip-files00021.pro'
46184ee17bf39361dabca25fcdce97a6
841c9a2173002f6adf9360260fbd6d0db0ee4d1c
'2011-11-08T01:21:27-05:00'
describe
'33504' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABEH' 'sip-files00021.QC.jpg'
0e7cc6a9ec8dc67dd6e5c9793a2fb9d2
789c800c72d70afb364e7781df2b50d87ce83e0d
describe
'3419008' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABEI' 'sip-files00021.tif'
f4f2e8f37fea39bdd3f958d7f331f10a
3796d75862626d7603003b7cd8d00dca5c02ffda
'2011-11-08T01:20:40-05:00'
describe
'1454' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABEJ' 'sip-files00021.txt'
f4e4af38efacec2f9efa306a7892606e
ccf7cd3ae607e23cd8625eb40d733c120597d430
describe
'8399' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABEK' 'sip-files00021thm.jpg'
badf0c2b2f5906182a995dda3897bd7c
e5b498e91ad4ee5df4045cd3285cfdc24400465a
describe
'448571' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABEL' 'sip-files00022.jp2'
6ee55a75f0b78b641e69c4786d161e98
1d189af5cbf7478e1c04b2c3a47ba2b28c67917e
describe
'99074' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABEM' 'sip-files00022.jpg'
bb86e63c460e737adbf1fbd017e41b54
9cd9549dcf13c4cb4bfa933a3d75465c7817d2af
'2011-11-08T01:20:33-05:00'
describe
'38371' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABEN' 'sip-files00022.pro'
eb25fa0e44a5fd212d083efaed8e7cd6
5ef2f9c14e7cdcac258f34baca70aa84ec85051a
'2011-11-08T01:20:55-05:00'
describe
'31453' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABEO' 'sip-files00022.QC.jpg'
9dd7623ddc106c056682dff0afe82426
ae07a18ace3c2110cd42568eb841c5fcc737da12
describe
'3597188' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABEP' 'sip-files00022.tif'
3a1430a4efb7622b8dabd2efe18882a2
eeffadb07e9786b720b90d9308c1274dfbbe3340
'2011-11-08T01:19:25-05:00'
describe
'1520' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABEQ' 'sip-files00022.txt'
b3c9b5fde61a2aed419240adb7d9c06c
a3180574dd07f9dc23a70cade6678e5eb18424e1
describe
'7530' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABER' 'sip-files00022thm.jpg'
3d248b910793f85a1cd1b562220552ba
c0f9011ba056a94cb92310877bf69a068da8ead1
'2011-11-08T01:20:53-05:00'
describe
'448505' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABES' 'sip-files00023.jp2'
2e4d5630bbe8b4884c62c3246316cfab
e9b8c94b36775f728c77cd7d0edf61198069fa43
'2011-11-08T01:19:41-05:00'
describe
'96038' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABET' 'sip-files00023.jpg'
ef3a0e160f0151bc8e8ac0d8bb1e972e
5307f859d1181cdcacb51024521b3143be3f87bc
'2011-11-08T01:19:56-05:00'
describe
'36443' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABEU' 'sip-files00023.pro'
419be9430ef89a87ff47f56047b3f90e
d7c514170cffc2c0a1ec3dd3d7cda0aca31e74ea
'2011-11-08T01:19:37-05:00'
describe
'29351' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABEV' 'sip-files00023.QC.jpg'
2aaba382d9006820b1f7fe7ecfbe269a
5b5a6f012d968645ff01854dfd6e87a5ff77a2e8
describe
'3597024' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABEW' 'sip-files00023.tif'
57bae2eff57dbf036a70570c8a3caae5
49316b6984a0b4396a690a5831061733d01c9e40
describe
'1455' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABEX' 'sip-files00023.txt'
7639b6cda8172fc4ce264bfd1975a8ca
f39a4798bcb8bdb5e707322c45a3ba3510fb7771
describe
'7020' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABEY' 'sip-files00023thm.jpg'
365737576dd07a2fa28a4cfbcc89eea3
e5aca4149f6f356a1ed1f84159f7fc1292fc89f4
describe
'448279' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABEZ' 'sip-files00024.jp2'
b05115cc34b2843cc689a7decb7d57ab
23b29666fe5d92fed035a1e2a73befd725407fa7
'2011-11-08T01:19:18-05:00'
describe
'104314' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABFA' 'sip-files00024.jpg'
38c018c18dfe7e62ea542872d55f9ced
9dc1f79b1732bdb5fe6147f90e4b4c706345bcf3
'2011-11-08T01:20:52-05:00'
describe
'38671' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABFB' 'sip-files00024.pro'
ba4a93e054b463fb04d5b5bee7c9c9af
820145fd5de3e7743f93651279ac06b83ecbe929
describe
'31756' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABFC' 'sip-files00024.QC.jpg'
b3e8d474d942f6578d66de3ee8f7f5fe
999647baf8e9a99243ec38f4cbab030eb7bf35c6
'2011-11-08T01:20:41-05:00'
describe
'3595008' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABFD' 'sip-files00024.tif'
de5632a5297c723130013a11e3626617
223cdd331d80312fa44b545eceb84291e216c261
describe
'1580' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABFE' 'sip-files00024.txt'
4bdef5efb057ee30f448cf0695ca9ab8
551483adb08a43ab2f9ee7c18bf385b9af17a730
describe
'7738' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABFF' 'sip-files00024thm.jpg'
1a919dce371ede9eb72688e8469f2986
56de033a4cbca21f194e2516c152b4c32b4dfa34
describe
'448282' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABFG' 'sip-files00025.jp2'
0041b36fc1a33e1e631a8c004ac6ee91
7e0012c0e3aeaac2e1a79297ee4458064f12d5fe
describe
'99547' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABFH' 'sip-files00025.jpg'
1cc23e6feecdde3953cf601c66788bc5
5d3846073e0303f820ff5b490044962b22c00202
'2011-11-08T01:20:22-05:00'
describe
'24935' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABFI' 'sip-files00025.QC.jpg'
220e020ae147751baf419c6a626b136f
b76e1a18ae5f198b51bbdd8b2349a74c9eaaf48a
describe
'3597000' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABFJ' 'sip-files00025.tif'
87ec2eae85e48fbb813c7ffc97dd83fe
e231d215e31b88f74247690050b7a109d4ab78a7
'2011-11-08T01:21:02-05:00'
describe
'6286' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABFK' 'sip-files00025thm.jpg'
cd7be38fe83bd0c9b92f12781e147c5a
8f25a6727dd257bfba5edb607a030f93dd6dbf0f
describe
'157311' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABFL' 'sip-files00026.jp2'
e614a690f99d04b2c96f75cb6da7ecd8
01da66c3ad5fd3672b2308129b41ad1eea2968e3
'2011-11-08T01:19:51-05:00'
describe
'8763' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABFM' 'sip-files00026.jpg'
287f3d1cc0b62ec86d3387c23359f216
a2f6ffeaceba57a26e64b77ff6c676d4008767cc
describe
'2453' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABFN' 'sip-files00026.QC.jpg'
123e6b325d97737fa0f8063f68d403a2
4118e3c7a8d0de439573e83134ad78d465d9c5ad
describe
'3594852' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABFO' 'sip-files00026.tif'
57e7f63c56f674249d3db126feadd586
06b501974c5d4e25585b9d7be842f0a526352082
'2011-11-08T01:21:07-05:00'
describe
'868' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABFP' 'sip-files00026thm.jpg'
1a76fa4c294ef5b442c315db4e1cbc83
294a2cfd544720c539401eb1fcdff31f4cc10fa2
describe
'448554' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABFQ' 'sip-files00027.jp2'
76ef760eb6e8a894fa1dc13939ddd7c1
eaffc645a0affd4d22902c91daaf79adbcedfc9e
'2011-11-08T01:21:33-05:00'
describe
'91227' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABFR' 'sip-files00027.jpg'
d16ac4089d0f7a4a278d9787f98b90b8
2570a863b5d9a054f5405cb96b85491653c6313f
'2011-11-08T01:20:18-05:00'
describe
'33780' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABFS' 'sip-files00027.pro'
550af12ccb2f6a436d97e8216d3125b0
054246aaa19ef35107183aaf0aa663939b56105a
'2011-11-08T01:21:23-05:00'
describe
'29909' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABFT' 'sip-files00027.QC.jpg'
dbae0b83f0e8acd9d40d23df0d48497f
344a7e3f2cf85fdd926bd849a4bdd2064853556a
describe
'3597184' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABFU' 'sip-files00027.tif'
2a11cd39c398fbd993a97456bb0d28f6
bff4287e0b547dc2296b191f7f5dd1a597939db3
'2011-11-08T01:21:06-05:00'
describe
'1387' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABFV' 'sip-files00027.txt'
619ed0707147481d51fa57727a16d92f
92f43dd8144456e851fcb798250dbca671b8c24d
describe
'7384' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABFW' 'sip-files00027thm.jpg'
bbc5962997b902497852d2cb9cb3e1f4
d3db27f70e477c74010e4017b550bb0171acb062
describe
'448118' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABFX' 'sip-files00028.jp2'
778dad65e7ddb472f263691c657eedb6
e6a048174f055683ee669eecb6bf991dff9ed6a5
'2011-11-08T01:19:35-05:00'
describe
'97279' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABFY' 'sip-files00028.jpg'
0fffcef62fd7da9ac85943d103971934
baa242eff4c8cb70b2e338359811948331b89ad4
describe
'18084' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABFZ' 'sip-files00028.pro'
10308b7d5c497982a8007b49151b5d11
edd3fbf2210dae3b80aeb9e3654c4b49ef987b3c
describe
'26953' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABGA' 'sip-files00028.QC.jpg'
d16c32ee7d1dfd488d4ece93b4a2437c
f797165d475d2cbbf4fe311535c9dfa137423190
describe
'3594704' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABGB' 'sip-files00028.tif'
595d6e4403fb415eac5b5f6b7f806711
cf3bd1ef56a41b189ad3c68f78fe82b3aac57c80
describe
'728' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABGC' 'sip-files00028.txt'
6e8b37053f6017965c2a719e21e404b5
b8b33943c09e3d44b5e2650c150905f23f428d9f
'2011-11-08T01:20:24-05:00'
describe
'6467' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABGD' 'sip-files00028thm.jpg'
ff602c26621cbc8d53cca56cadfb2f19
f0b7e6ca3c542b1ea0d5db3a0e74e9993ff27590
describe
'448283' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABGE' 'sip-files00029.jp2'
95496216856afbe074a2b50e188c695a
2a9bb23fbc0c301749857d2c72d10fa172a916ac
describe
'99899' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABGF' 'sip-files00029.jpg'
bcd93d58ced83ab3646f451356d91a46
11a1beb04c72a06fd1276998bcb42477e6eb773a
'2011-11-08T01:21:17-05:00'
describe
'37750' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABGG' 'sip-files00029.pro'
41789e465c9d8546ecb74a22eae625f0
097208c03fcf0b62fc46b75eecc955e0d7c8b734
'2011-11-08T01:21:42-05:00'
describe
'31604' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABGH' 'sip-files00029.QC.jpg'
88458bd12d2d0a693bc13b445270bd43
dd1e2673590640226a38a988b11ba80765971be2
'2011-11-08T01:19:43-05:00'
describe
'3594860' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABGI' 'sip-files00029.tif'
5e7316ca6cfe81778be705ea94bb7b20
fa68e614fa9f18b0689c250a21be36ec2bd3e988
'2011-11-08T01:20:03-05:00'
describe
'1494' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABGJ' 'sip-files00029.txt'
0f27965d4d708a82041812443ccd775f
17a97d6e30c0862dc9d466de950d36a51cf04e38
describe
'7258' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABGK' 'sip-files00029thm.jpg'
af528e45466e78dc5cf9184a36f4ae7b
65714e0cacd7e6cdc85de821f74150cde8b34b36
describe
'194256' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABGL' 'sip-files00030.jp2'
48801894ab4d7e35a27d7f802d215c25
149cd4777ad79e0c61315d2473382d84a2671a69
describe
'21408' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABGM' 'sip-files00030.jpg'
6f336db4cc6d3815b1852db984ad49f0
05befdea141e56dcdb28b6eac19c7956d0f27a68
describe
'5847' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABGN' 'sip-files00030.pro'
b4c518d9ad4db4c4705aca98b5a01d7d
abfe5329f2097e5197d9944af78ea5174d9a2c34
'2011-11-08T01:20:12-05:00'
describe
'6634' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABGO' 'sip-files00030.QC.jpg'
eb4590f448af877f714107a401672131
b56e39f0b7a363d3c95e4a50094d9b7ca70d94d0
describe
'3595316' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABGP' 'sip-files00030.tif'
0102ff7041766d4ed5f22a5db75ec8cc
f0852a05ed972222fc45bc7880de4b1bd4f87b2c
describe
'247' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABGQ' 'sip-files00030.txt'
f4304448b9e0b1c323ae57bf71aed1fc
3856ac20da0486bf04ad4d630c490f30fc944682
'2011-11-08T01:20:45-05:00'
describe
'1904' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABGR' 'sip-files00030thm.jpg'
1a773e3d50dcc65003d5e9a889bf26e5
dbffc09d7224750d05ecdae87d01f64ee1f16ca9
'2011-11-08T01:20:57-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABGS' 'sip-files00031.jp2'
3dc90f9d47bed366da669d620a3d9a59
60fcc176796b358939bb03c7bb6ef2581c17346b
'2011-11-08T01:21:24-05:00'
describe
'83127' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABGT' 'sip-files00031.jpg'
51ef3a030104e757a403272344407e43
973e67e96e3e36b1731b57bfb4ec9145dfb8f8c5
'2011-11-08T01:20:20-05:00'
describe
'31208' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABGU' 'sip-files00031.pro'
31d02a1db046031b3c55946b8f7f7999
09122554ea87d04176f96d99649006fcc64a2420
describe
'26476' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABGV' 'sip-files00031.QC.jpg'
74bd302d570ab42f8d556160b25ba6f4
ec5823a7ffd8990974487702d750712e7a7d8ace
describe
'3596768' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABGW' 'sip-files00031.tif'
eb69ddfae8d8b9b6a4985a3fac3bfe64
48b30fa5e919d5d6a28fa45be6cac1add3c04b1b
describe
'1291' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABGX' 'sip-files00031.txt'
b97e0660d1b462a51a3dc89b878f99d2
10e8171299e17bc05097a3cb261736c0fb230a1e
describe
'6306' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABGY' 'sip-files00031thm.jpg'
7fadcf82e60af67e92bc30bb9e9a92fb
adf2fed2fb13fc0fa7b08953c0db239cf5d39944
describe
'448572' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABGZ' 'sip-files00032.jp2'
011254d5fec37b26f72d1c96a0a1ef52
9ce3c3ccd7336c690106d93071772eb9e034fc70
describe
'105830' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABHA' 'sip-files00032.jpg'
888fa325325d5261bd39893e4da5aa51
c6373d97382df9c8f2fd9ebb3ddf5a48e34000ff
'2011-11-08T01:20:30-05:00'
describe
'38755' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABHB' 'sip-files00032.pro'
d0be99a7d205991fe76c3c048c7b3f5c
2050e29d4647b89fc7367db76173ac1b8bca757a
describe
'33350' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABHC' 'sip-files00032.QC.jpg'
9dbbb2b7d7cae2bd012850570341ab5f
b3d080b7c37f766beb915cc7ed8e76f5a184c1d3
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABHD' 'sip-files00032.tif'
5952f0a65dfea3da49ceeacd846e5691
c263b3e3f02b14bc0c59452ad2d9428d6b05984d
'2011-11-08T01:20:58-05:00'
describe
'1582' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABHE' 'sip-files00032.txt'
bc1f4b4dda6132ab8591d323dc4591e8
274f52b3b23dcabd175f0500d1f72b95eb0f4646
describe
'7668' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABHF' 'sip-files00032thm.jpg'
b4da887c4fba806d2af086efcb7c1429
fc07a5c6beb91c5628bc3ac10284b75b8b67b1cf
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABHG' 'sip-files00033.jp2'
0e1a8f2d2762aed179da23bc5b7ee21c
b2725abef1fa33c8f26159500a027f2c8cd4d4cd
describe
'103049' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABHH' 'sip-files00033.jpg'
10fa723d256577ba427902d03a1b7030
388aea83c72d735f384b449c04216350cdf5e11e
describe
'39083' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABHI' 'sip-files00033.pro'
b2f4eb47b97d3b686a813f2b39b120b9
a2d92ccafda5f428a745b3bc3634852a67d55410
describe
'32613' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABHJ' 'sip-files00033.QC.jpg'
8857f8e60a853b666ef8ceceb578049d
2c9d4822833fa95c4f92fd971cdab9c25405eb97
describe
'3597308' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABHK' 'sip-files00033.tif'
4e70e376a3901e581fe55197ab8b981d
537bb478631661314710b1e1576ad70667d9cd17
'2011-11-08T01:20:47-05:00'
describe
'1548' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABHL' 'sip-files00033.txt'
e986078db2f161250effb16fd49593fe
5bdf12df16637afa3dae821163370994ea4c6b49
'2011-11-08T01:20:44-05:00'
describe
'7831' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABHM' 'sip-files00033thm.jpg'
9c91ae4ca86999fb43e1259b1dad31b7
e1a74e83c72e5b672c7b7459a07d63837412a2dd
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABHN' 'sip-files00034.jp2'
5f21431706e9f702c63740dabea3ca0a
8f03218b6c384621b1a64189003d08611ff52b80
describe
'102390' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABHO' 'sip-files00034.jpg'
26eaf38c8c09bf81419f717027fd9d12
abd36f153676fed3778675badf9839b676f29925
describe
'39882' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABHP' 'sip-files00034.pro'
b2da98629a4122e9b2e7c97811934cf6
a063d378073b3d6dac34f092a7506949e95a11d3
'2011-11-08T01:19:45-05:00'
describe
'32580' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABHQ' 'sip-files00034.QC.jpg'
0cf64e1d44fdf76eaf8a47a49bbfdafd
d799812076df3c378f12addf813f53bab2ae3fd3
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABHR' 'sip-files00034.tif'
9b1c2038e8944b3d4b48ef6688113c9c
a26e634efd9cf4e3b976e439126d46139c20cb46
describe
'1566' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABHS' 'sip-files00034.txt'
1fc98af74c86ca445091446cefba992e
620624751ad42405a37e36c3d6e309bb418be2d0
describe
'7658' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABHT' 'sip-files00034thm.jpg'
ed1fb6eb1fae3f528445051f9d1a331e
f7a6b376dfd1ecce8f6e03bdc34de235dacf3940
'2011-11-08T01:21:37-05:00'
describe
'429348' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABHU' 'sip-files00035.jp2'
aaf452efe4cf16a765390d515cea968a
30dafbc6db4ada9cf681ccb85c2812050fd30cad
describe
'107086' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABHV' 'sip-files00035.jpg'
aba48b5927a0d3bd0f92fb75d2c4a094
2badfbe40e62a93b3486507d27d629bdaef755b4
describe
'23456' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABHW' 'sip-files00035.pro'
2b3042a8888f103fbe1bcda7c7a72ec4
cfcc56b4aa4daf390eb00e87092f1c5198764722
describe
'30620' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABHX' 'sip-files00035.QC.jpg'
a9a6b692a0253e9eb7f895bcb5cdb70f
5b5e38caba9d18d095e4d6af3d26e140be89800e
describe
'3443612' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABHY' 'sip-files00035.tif'
a76bf9c623141856409219faa107680f
0cee496483bc6e73f803ab60f24b85b5ae3a7aa9
describe
'984' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABHZ' 'sip-files00035.txt'
894ad7b0175fc463f60fef64b4deb56f
9cc5fb454c0dae00cc60bd16a770516956f96d04
describe
'7555' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABIA' 'sip-files00035thm.jpg'
ae7e25eb6311d2d34e1e5dff54af9f51
a6fba8c044545de015e2a66c37e021baf49a0058
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABIB' 'sip-files00036.jp2'
0feb77f23f53926eb054cd918bb4cd8e
01868176d37c5842a66a5fe9139229eae7ab2c5b
describe
'87725' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABIC' 'sip-files00036.jpg'
c0f188ca84520dbc21adeedee9756973
ab9979ac18175fe8d094a4332992335467fef7e7
'2011-11-08T01:19:16-05:00'
describe
'31766' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABID' 'sip-files00036.pro'
f251012c9d12ba036b690db80598bbe2
5f5d4a305462a09fec9a74675bdb207351b01bcc
describe
'26773' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABIE' 'sip-files00036.QC.jpg'
741586e57a9237ef35de50c217e73ffd
775257d6a05392d08ed4fa1389903e4789402273
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABIF' 'sip-files00036.tif'
a04e3894c39d09bc6046b2db684167a0
c258d55ec8a429a77d159386ea55070d950d8484
'2011-11-08T01:21:19-05:00'
describe
'1289' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABIG' 'sip-files00036.txt'
3789fff185939cbb497afb247db68b04
51d911a63b51057c04c7c1b34ea9f69275882d23
describe
'7295' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABIH' 'sip-files00036thm.jpg'
718e3a2ddae8e174c867636be280f477
c49000d01035413ac3cc272142fe9be80389e424
describe
'433069' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABII' 'sip-files00037.jp2'
f6a4ebd4503eba36583c8a452be8d9d6
1b7cc727e17514193d4831f5d293281cd7d0f0cf
describe
'101152' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABIJ' 'sip-files00037.jpg'
0ac3f6a8de1433c52618842e0f6b2639
a472b80c59aee040cb37518d30fd45ff6df72d63
describe
'36459' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABIK' 'sip-files00037.pro'
d4208a938a636bc85a66f078b0a9a1e9
a3c22e164075e4b39ea2634a661223d2d053e7ff
'2011-11-08T01:21:40-05:00'
describe
'32574' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABIL' 'sip-files00037.QC.jpg'
ca9f7a41fde929bc5200506cc2e4c3f0
00b97e652ba4504237aaa7ba17d7ea3e2853cbee
describe
'3473300' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABIM' 'sip-files00037.tif'
01cdde1affa489be307242ef7ee3cc39
fd03939f41c233bd085d414641b53e295b179240
describe
'1456' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABIN' 'sip-files00037.txt'
26962553e6a8d192cf487b0164d8ac0b
f2859fcde0a78a91f4a62b4ca69f72f42fe62ee4
describe
'8014' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABIO' 'sip-files00037thm.jpg'
3d08f3d85b5a6bf38bffd5fa59e4e875
4c70d526ded076cf86c03befeeec80fadf1d7920
describe
'433107' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABIP' 'sip-files00038.jp2'
d1012f32b38f865de9d2b74fc873b07e
0b8c64fbc651186364a8bb4f334e4a3d096a0a20
describe
'103128' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABIQ' 'sip-files00038.jpg'
85ee11818f839b91553d8fd52e891c65
0eb3ec8e28ad5ab602605a49fb7929f7418428e5
'2011-11-08T01:19:17-05:00'
describe
'38148' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABIR' 'sip-files00038.pro'
6e1b97a78dd7bc63fa6854e9cb35156d
ac74b18a231aca4111987238e3c693d5d0db47f2
describe
'32977' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABIS' 'sip-files00038.QC.jpg'
955201f614e11e3cbce77df1b3069fc8
cd078d25478eaa8fc4ea3785d1fb83c19fe8204e
'2011-11-08T01:21:20-05:00'
describe
'3473400' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABIT' 'sip-files00038.tif'
c69c2681717530e1a8f858b897d1a95c
40cc3f403e576ca60a5b84ae8d97111077ff4fe3
describe
'1521' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABIU' 'sip-files00038.txt'
512bd2dec632538838371f0ebd5c4426
a3b7619f3518e3c1797045dd194d9b914f067fcc
describe
'7947' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABIV' 'sip-files00038thm.jpg'
dd4e7c9d5bb74b8ccd7f522516038b92
782d2da16156455a5fbdd1c4b1af8d0bacfb0dfa
'2011-11-08T01:19:12-05:00'
describe
'433108' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABIW' 'sip-files00039.jp2'
c00bbd1eeb5b856f350c4456c5087821
1d81dd7f8c53c39eadd1d56bc1ea6fad93edeff0
describe
'112223' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABIX' 'sip-files00039.jpg'
4888eef05d63f895e0c224af88acfb02
65eff8c785a905151b11e7eebfca93bf4e9de21d
describe
'41080' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABIY' 'sip-files00039.pro'
8660d4ba9c08b96be8d64980736f1370
7d135265bf82d8e909609f1118e7a06c67281d6d
describe
'35425' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABIZ' 'sip-files00039.QC.jpg'
15832d44f6214016a6c4380148c44858
facc915004fb83b205a45d3e2fa1e2f787a97026
describe
'3473408' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABJA' 'sip-files00039.tif'
79dc0f23d0fea9281f117c0ddcdcc0c1
469f81cede5be67b31a8bbaae1ac1afd1edf7364
describe
'1632' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABJB' 'sip-files00039.txt'
11d8cb1dad57dd76c527d3d29e47ee72
a5e5ae3b9f42b6a9f36bca977dc2c71ed2e6ec2c
describe
'8453' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABJC' 'sip-files00039thm.jpg'
b87b082bfd06a904b18fa0a041de7a09
15d075c53770ee25ad89241f33647f1c58d45cb0
describe
'433059' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABJD' 'sip-files00040.jp2'
698c466c996f091268474135eee6f667
4b552354217c84b97c5e631df4a497314f34c0a4
describe
'104538' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABJE' 'sip-files00040.jpg'
f1838ae2e5b9bd8d5ad5373067e53bbd
ffbe7f8c2d8e60c50f6a0472e33f15df7478d197
describe
'39257' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABJF' 'sip-files00040.pro'
8e1d96af3e812e29dbb3badbee958cd3
c9de5fd3600e7f671b0e493f91a46146345a3200
describe
'33543' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABJG' 'sip-files00040.QC.jpg'
6884f7472f0328d639a443dc7efb8385
8fab401c1ae72001a6ee4581119e5108e165f2dc
'2011-11-08T01:19:06-05:00'
describe
'3473492' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABJH' 'sip-files00040.tif'
75241c259d8b244c5212da15936eb9fe
ea338ff76602a8592e51711d6f550cc6b416888d
describe
'1571' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABJI' 'sip-files00040.txt'
e2366c45500e7628ba8b36dab7bb6cad
3bbb334d32de7a6501a60f394c3a9513b0fc078a
'2011-11-08T01:21:11-05:00'
describe
'8133' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABJJ' 'sip-files00040thm.jpg'
82578f97c7ae9c2b4058312d4f838136
f31f66c1ed287635bcb90f3acdb7a1b1dd15d75d
'2011-11-08T01:20:14-05:00'
describe
'433110' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABJK' 'sip-files00041.jp2'
561cf6f4af6a5facc6e831a7f3701089
24b9eabc503ae8638f1970acd04c1a020594288c
'2011-11-08T01:19:24-05:00'
describe
'99108' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABJL' 'sip-files00041.jpg'
6c119a32cb12872cb23ba19793cb7e71
cdfff54a6ffa1d10791ee495d9da63ee0b214945
describe
'36481' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABJM' 'sip-files00041.pro'
7c83aa3b236cc14c57d6fdf6ed81e6d2
0bbd701f9471ec021ee7e53145f5bd9d9e195044
describe
'31919' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABJN' 'sip-files00041.QC.jpg'
62b0783a1f79c0f65652ee3cd32992ba
2395a6883db8072407c465f239b2097da286f267
'2011-11-08T01:19:27-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABJO' 'sip-files00041.tif'
d3c76f9e4b1f9497b1ca727e40e2a1e4
a3f82923df373395256070542cd6442d68e72b49
describe
'1449' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABJP' 'sip-files00041.txt'
33591ea300b6c13303fd6c7fad8d876a
1e8122cc48dfc90d285a16e9daa9276fdd228035
describe
'7791' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABJQ' 'sip-files00041thm.jpg'
4f128733395d3d3e4d607eed039812bc
66e8fa69638a803724813498c84e04ec6153c2fa
describe
'433087' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABJR' 'sip-files00042.jp2'
6842a71b81567db54f6ab76594d247b0
76d2aee1d6e23144351dad35b4ef83da43eb18e8
describe
'82771' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABJS' 'sip-files00042.jpg'
7ceefe8984dbf58684c49c72517989e2
6831887ba9862d0d6cae23e2da63fda453aeef7d
describe
'29569' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABJT' 'sip-files00042.pro'
64feee776e2c3e3ddf7dcef4b74efade
a98ddf49ff118412458202e0f8c6df7429f6191d
describe
'26608' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABJU' 'sip-files00042.QC.jpg'
18167a7de481222ae5f3d1d3d4f14a31
cf66954de245c2a64b255246328c0aee9829527d
describe
'3473008' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABJV' 'sip-files00042.tif'
98bb2d598529475e0d96aeb8bb65a19b
67174c33b9581f23cf979ff40c7a4717a911ef4e
describe
'1209' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABJW' 'sip-files00042.txt'
c54252eb7a71bdd7559320d2774f854c
06a811e91e62fa1d475b1a26fd658477ba03dfa1
describe
'6479' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABJX' 'sip-files00042thm.jpg'
e04b373862b2be78d88a3be040edbe76
1c745d021fd1ab1c8651700f460c94eafac35a9e
describe
'432935' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABJY' 'sip-files00043.jp2'
bbf76e84532a139882695a850eaaf6d4
cc19f58faa628f84a25798d9d5d7e90b7b563233
describe
'115579' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABJZ' 'sip-files00043.jpg'
ef3757b0b8e2557f9c34c4725362a4bf
769e7d5edd3fd32797d41ba91eabd57a14d449bb
describe
'27677' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABKA' 'sip-files00043.QC.jpg'
0bdf1e8c9520ad12666b2181f22c7b08
ff8e4ea80b0e7d3a50d4a3ff4c232eb4386d4efe
describe
'3473332' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABKB' 'sip-files00043.tif'
486bb72589907dfedfe9dd26be2bfa58
005748fb4d03a312b79607ff19da4290baf1d4e9
describe
'6668' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABKC' 'sip-files00043thm.jpg'
24f5693f86f6cedc6f9d1629bd9f3ff6
0fcccef0a8ca2b82f150aafd097bfc484563976f
'2011-11-08T01:19:46-05:00'
describe
'105208' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABKD' 'sip-files00044.jp2'
c883693a5aacd8402ad4810e01f1be00
257afeccfb54a5b5649705e35c4a5771a761eb0e
describe
'8697' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABKE' 'sip-files00044.jpg'
6862ae053c689fb3e122c211d4588fb2
6b111337716da8ec5293670c5202195cf4325403
'2011-11-08T01:21:14-05:00'
describe
'2568' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABKF' 'sip-files00044.QC.jpg'
65e2efee6494fc38e18511f7e6133c92
6da49fc25ab495b5123ebbf0443566a43306f2c4
'2011-11-08T01:21:18-05:00'
describe
'3484892' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABKG' 'sip-files00044.tif'
27748dbbed489c5c598f024f8a371e05
a1ee8bf660002494d39a20f68070cc9959d6f63c
describe
'933' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABKH' 'sip-files00044thm.jpg'
8652a6c9e44b34002025ecdbdc5f1dcb
88a91a55e96f82d258df485421125c6cb8446ee2
'2011-11-08T01:20:25-05:00'
describe
'440245' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABKI' 'sip-files00045.jp2'
d39e9cd473b9f0a634540c3c1efbe969
2934ddf3b48f1bd305bb23bed39ee7ed3adc6ff5
describe
'102318' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABKJ' 'sip-files00045.jpg'
edc63bdc7ef4be29ab12e759132f0791
9b67847b6c25e8c814d52e29d66e539463a26309
describe
'38387' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABKK' 'sip-files00045.pro'
ac7ed0854b7f73de555e2f54fea36baa
3e1260162693064b940d7462e061b4aa64f94c42
describe
'31988' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABKL' 'sip-files00045.QC.jpg'
84d6763ab2b84c3239ae4575608bbbbd
3364c4a41874107179c0e9fd02c8932a4907c35b
describe
'3530584' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABKM' 'sip-files00045.tif'
892aa9e67202ce21d8d6d3dc2264ab74
a964ce14f17f0f6e714fb822904a67f832001b82
'2011-11-08T01:21:28-05:00'
describe
'1526' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABKN' 'sip-files00045.txt'
1d3ba7bb4dbade50905a8def219a2515
9d87ae16b7d99bf47509c6b82f98ff7f22ca7147
describe
'8214' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABKO' 'sip-files00045thm.jpg'
f4d3f982c152c77ff82e59771d8c60dc
fad626027eccc05606734ede629a21aba34fab8d
describe
'439097' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABKP' 'sip-files00046.jp2'
a06c455790761bf77b2a6f002d0adefe
960533dbb49fbdec2a00d635f532fbe0e0d0bd01
describe
'94095' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABKQ' 'sip-files00046.jpg'
65c3f8007fd60da2af57e5ce7eb4d375
0c1009e265f13f28cc84cc25099c6e6dc9957657
describe
'36403' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABKR' 'sip-files00046.pro'
56118564a0b4d3e17c40cd20c5177a02
138a479e4aa10272b0733414b99e3aa9c586ff69
describe
'29852' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABKS' 'sip-files00046.QC.jpg'
82224943d78ec8c70fb2090a157df649
84c824bc6d37d8d2fcfc6316e577718ca8ca4958
describe
'3521300' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABKT' 'sip-files00046.tif'
e62c705335dc049dfc4e9f96ef39b1a4
70f1f9bacc7aaefefc06911eb46cafb7d4bbd03e
describe
'1445' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABKU' 'sip-files00046.txt'
32c4145db118159642a302cd7136a504
1116e793821f3d6bf42b0e26a58b1276a5754b17
describe
'7466' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABKV' 'sip-files00046thm.jpg'
3a273ced0a4e2522613cff2420e4d2d6
495053ab936970e65ed7f7778ca594c7762bdbb4
'2011-11-08T01:19:21-05:00'
describe
'434714' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABKW' 'sip-files00047.jp2'
3b8846b7d7c3dbd571c5470ce031f964
0ec9f7d9396a4eb1e3c9a6fb04a30f79efa15188
describe
'99548' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABKX' 'sip-files00047.jpg'
1246dfd8bb51314a6f3f98b16807957d
6e4d8917d372fff05ede1ce0910414aa1d5c0118
describe
'1396' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABKY' 'sip-files00047.pro'
59fac93e802cbf4bb221769e1f41f193
a988917941d35c7a72a3f9536a14e7d7b5ab98f7
describe
'23508' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABKZ' 'sip-files00047.QC.jpg'
6769e4a543531117d6600eca72158cf9
432253a52ecbc71434b23ed9a453183e09141be4
describe
'3486700' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABLA' 'sip-files00047.tif'
13ac9e6a4439af34a35a6eafaaea8004
0b13bd4abe6111d8d857d180247c20735f6dba73
describe
'188' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABLB' 'sip-files00047.txt'
2de8e9870ba2a524dfec9a1cd586b9ae
57ca6e51e2ab4081b7137595ce0b8a9057115889
describe
'5810' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABLC' 'sip-files00047thm.jpg'
faaf5284db7121a6c7173fde8a9085d5
afa9448a4d5bf0315c31adf856fe110e5dc5db6e
describe
'99251' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABLD' 'sip-files00048.jp2'
689c5a965077a60514952af803cbbbab
accffcf39da48365c8ef8ca9e639da7e1ab7da3f
describe
'8400' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABLE' 'sip-files00048.jpg'
43c7e81a81fe60d24e2d364c487651dd
9f97eb615a28bbd3c966f7bec4306857ac5364fb
describe
'2523' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABLF' 'sip-files00048.QC.jpg'
66c4d2cd7b2b7a78764595eb9bed0e22
a4d62bc75784433153953e218a0bfe9fd76dd133
describe
'3484884' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABLG' 'sip-files00048.tif'
bffd22cbf34b7d9cd8b3d28c80adfb42
4954fdae25edd39df5e963a8f33da38c0dcf61d4
describe
'875' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABLH' 'sip-files00048thm.jpg'
5aa03ace41f881f7abfd2947d18389cb
f398742f430dde50c0fd49e95f2b4184cfc0ac82
describe
'443759' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABLI' 'sip-files00049.jp2'
67e999fccefcfaa97b5d81c6aa3128b5
b80beac5e6f62441b20d49ebc4b96c2c8d2a80a1
describe
'100423' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABLJ' 'sip-files00049.jpg'
276870bc365c995a0e63268a6b967084
43f34d4e65316433888407d0af9694d2f5736d8c
describe
'38775' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABLK' 'sip-files00049.pro'
2cc457779827f3fd6ccf0fa57999fa08
cde4d2efc188b9c619eea7084cf99910022dade9
describe
'31107' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABLL' 'sip-files00049.QC.jpg'
0127e2b3f9cd1a3fc6fae5cc3fd5937f
a7e272208b20e51ccdf54c65b30a82c621084f8e
describe
'3558800' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABLM' 'sip-files00049.tif'
0952cd68d5074bcbf13e5cada37eaa7b
afb69afa041c90effa0ca8f3b448e9ae12bb09d4
describe
'1547' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABLN' 'sip-files00049.txt'
0f2cae0d1064233a842e0a395445518a
3db9a46659bbd72949b7d228f55fe1e85feb2dc7
describe
'7529' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABLO' 'sip-files00049thm.jpg'
24ca153c3272d26b290f2300af82688b
646d93296339840f0e4e859fee0d85aef819a8a9
describe
'437687' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABLP' 'sip-files00050.jp2'
763727da9730e538d403b6deb947ab85
a8c3daddc57fb22577dfe92599d9d7b6077398d4
describe
'103524' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABLQ' 'sip-files00050.jpg'
f387654a1d071043a17152b5113b03d3
40eed5f3b1dd0f98d95a92832b6343ee79d34c05
describe
'39477' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABLR' 'sip-files00050.pro'
ed55bb68b3437cbbc5afdce6af6a73fe
93e6b94fc73d758546231fead92886987cd12a67
describe
'32603' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABLS' 'sip-files00050.QC.jpg'
330b12e897165de108daaf1786d7d4f4
15a390c37a7ee0e54645a52eba3d19e8612e78d1
describe
'3509872' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABLT' 'sip-files00050.tif'
c1de9d39ced95da93dd57cdd608e7ab1
d5bdf4802cfa4a0a987343a01dab692c73a6b8a5
describe
'1552' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABLU' 'sip-files00050.txt'
f2dfcc288df6e357fc604d0135e29813
7afd774356441e30f6a0bb3ad7edb6ab70525e4a
describe
'7725' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABLV' 'sip-files00050thm.jpg'
222074dfc5de987b5b38e348de14ba95
02872eba9b763033039879f68e086892d60ed97a
describe
'448499' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABLW' 'sip-files00051.jp2'
62e622057ea25a5773a1bd3b2e20ed27
9812316dd7d62714af8b9741d5bb6a2342674e7b
describe
'100231' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABLX' 'sip-files00051.jpg'
80e0ca8e86413bd02d49b6f7627acef0
bb583846efeebd12d8a99d4a4a288bfe4f38b36a
describe
'37230' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABLY' 'sip-files00051.pro'
88eabf4cf9f6e8535c77953cfff246dc
dd27cfea4e24f3ccd14633ba95ca318684155b55
describe
'32583' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABLZ' 'sip-files00051.QC.jpg'
b90891be368a6a68a88a8f309b070b63
1fb97a654eeb30cd0ce39cafa4479e02aa969813
describe
'3597044' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABMA' 'sip-files00051.tif'
3038b238c422929f3eaa45167acc41ca
87a5f08080051a5ba7005f4c0636e6ab815280ed
describe
'1475' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABMB' 'sip-files00051.txt'
47c0645b73d14657c7ef5f30bbfbd0bf
d9b7f561e81679f600bb310e759dc704d83a0b65
describe
'7608' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABMC' 'sip-files00051thm.jpg'
bf8b9f80ae5660b8a95872feac92e4d4
357f7ea15282e55b0a5776ad47b653f499497a14
describe
'434578' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABMD' 'sip-files00052.jp2'
47206aa547f4cdb1673651b4139043f2
989469c224da4ace30a3eb15d1cb6211ebc72ed6
describe
'105315' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABME' 'sip-files00052.jpg'
ad4b7ba0dfbc145a132873d4753888e9
07718cea6579b14232a934f917e2ffa9fc05736f
describe
'38540' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABMF' 'sip-files00052.pro'
e48a41355b62c691f8329b2154c077c7
b5aff97212ebc5431174733726aadf8c1a9680a6
describe
'33155' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABMG' 'sip-files00052.QC.jpg'
e7ca6858bd64a5e49e7c9251b26c224d
fe5ad08e52fb2474dcbd6383fab56f223f5b0914
describe
'3485504' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABMH' 'sip-files00052.tif'
06bfb54d61c67e6096b5a0679c232035
d41d5ccaa80aa47bb75124291aa07c8edb8ce245
describe
'1516' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABMI' 'sip-files00052.txt'
706aa21a8e78b67d8021e5186a0d6a12
ae7808b06c6477fd3084a828e8cbc3ccd69021a3
describe
'8064' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABMJ' 'sip-files00052thm.jpg'
4bbb2160904cec589b90db1e588564ce
521c4a01cdec1266b838b16448d4eb8f981aa960
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABMK' 'sip-files00053.jp2'
19470137325e0d4514d1b213ac478a24
1a2c26540933833ea96b9c5683180ae41f5bb47a
describe
'111052' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABML' 'sip-files00053.jpg'
69560d933ee1bbae35e93a10978f4f77
6b9232c53ee005cf843a7f7bddd582dead79c921
describe
'35306' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABMM' 'sip-files00053.pro'
b97bb3413144068a93da2bfe0a2dd919
c9a3ef2aa9857c730b45ebe72046ba0aa8674b68
describe
'33441' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABMN' 'sip-files00053.QC.jpg'
f9a8f6330704580e44dc75978678ae3b
b78f5dabdd4ee1c36f90b8f70a871bb47a7222f2
'2011-11-08T01:20:35-05:00'
describe
'3597216' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABMO' 'sip-files00053.tif'
6f66ea929d22dbf73833214c046580c1
3832cd35181af6f2ff3ff567bc3b3e61342a1f7d
describe
'1453' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABMP' 'sip-files00053.txt'
6190b2745aa4017be09d645d92f2ec4b
aa3f18818eae35a3382715ab678e72bd36d32cbc
describe
'7787' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABMQ' 'sip-files00053thm.jpg'
57c97ef499c5e449614948d90f1ef74e
722cfee0be16306d33ee74da241a201139db6bd7
describe
'433019' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABMR' 'sip-files00054.jp2'
19eaa8c786643d82ebc118ce94928f5b
024981c3589588e69440f1f5de0b7f34968d67fc
describe
'100523' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABMS' 'sip-files00054.jpg'
5a606a3e4fee6f6835c5e05e47586d2c
107b50b93d25fa91ebfd8be5f671f91209edffb2
describe
'36065' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABMT' 'sip-files00054.pro'
56ec5345b71225f6cc7cd72d5931bf8d
c5496109ab8a034632ed5ba1917449646c1bb1e8
describe
'31374' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABMU' 'sip-files00054.QC.jpg'
5494ee1375f9b1d82d6f3af2a526c419
ac80d30e5291b63c0e762260add369afc67c6209
describe
'3473320' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABMV' 'sip-files00054.tif'
f91d52b6bfc51adad00290c215d60f0f
a26e8d38625f3e25ceae0c8b721477f77831f16a
describe
'1485' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABMW' 'sip-files00054.txt'
bb02567b3901f882a248fd99ba7af858
1787dd3c1dfd17db8ecfffee8236a19a85ec9023
'2011-11-08T01:19:10-05:00'
describe
'7768' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABMX' 'sip-files00054thm.jpg'
0509f52c5a252f8950a29b235c55681b
384ba12acff5717ad04df6e49e81c0df2d9cea4f
describe
'433084' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABMY' 'sip-files00055.jp2'
37a266c75949c469380685d531071a55
0823328784dacaa006175afd81c6eaffbf671e76
describe
'132530' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABMZ' 'sip-files00055.jpg'
a980a1675da183c632bd6fb9939044c4
0c94feeba45d61ffe49c070625f79f605644bbb3
describe
'1221' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABNA' 'sip-files00055.pro'
7ef2df1f6f7d229ddc82982cb9eb38fe
7f31ff345cfbf563e6c578cfc80964107c259e92
describe
'30158' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABNB' 'sip-files00055.QC.jpg'
dc92346af86126001fc3adc29ca097d0
59ed855d471b5dec675805542fd82fe6ec76b573
describe
'3473308' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABNC' 'sip-files00055.tif'
7c7bd03ff97f16b4b0e271378e3a4a65
4683fd8ac893a4e8895430d24f414235d4503319
describe
'332' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABND' 'sip-files00055.txt'
aeb77cf63f41ec6c6b961850f88ab43b
3a1237cbfa9ddb4360a1b6c5692967c5447d95d9
'2011-11-08T01:20:48-05:00'
describe
Invalid character
'7007' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABNE' 'sip-files00055thm.jpg'
e43fbc2019d61360e64136165aa85318
101211b887a0028f51abd4ddbeee9e2b2b2e4fbd
describe
'130821' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABNF' 'sip-files00056.jp2'
9c70581f574aece7da5cc46b9a3014a3
db41de016d4087c669f4b6b8058247aa29f0251d
describe
'9518' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABNG' 'sip-files00056.jpg'
df853ddd57d17526695b996d22723ce9
afe9a9448a7370a152ddd54b6ce3d41883084201
describe
'2694' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABNH' 'sip-files00056.QC.jpg'
59d780925c50be324c5377656d5d03e7
b555536a897b9a6afaab20353ffbb1f8c44d3267
describe
'3471116' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABNI' 'sip-files00056.tif'
c63dbbb623f81dc389fbafdac0911b60
02b3270e523cd4a0850adb85789a4e12165759ef
describe
'892' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABNJ' 'sip-files00056thm.jpg'
7158ea94052550539fd979b94c74e4de
7bb2e36f12c760cdbbf98468b5321b39e9588f80
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABNK' 'sip-files00057.jp2'
ac1e4aeab001f392f1b44c04279812e7
bad785e6c5f57268ba568d66ba96e9c3ada02dd5
describe
'108655' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABNL' 'sip-files00057.jpg'
d45407f5fe73cb8f6bfeee2bcc8b7129
0c2177990d4eba67b37b42bb73be0db11b8b9b37
describe
'39305' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABNM' 'sip-files00057.pro'
43450388040cd6e1e000b5a640f895b7
826af961b61a0c0e49fcd219177f6d39f780146a
describe
'34159' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABNN' 'sip-files00057.QC.jpg'
2930410bad5d8d87c3c63a5217bb9f69
b7e1622fc38753987048b288f3049491f36a079a
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABNO' 'sip-files00057.tif'
91d89566af0647b20688a733ac814aaf
47ab19b2fa22a116201f14827db784669572f348
describe
'1588' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABNP' 'sip-files00057.txt'
6ee853708e8e82bf3bc7349496f6ca3f
2f2ccfd1fcc4edc624c08bbdc9bd96e203b8f4b7
describe
'8233' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABNQ' 'sip-files00057thm.jpg'
cf40bb0550b49d2a8680e039ebf8ccd8
02dc9993e42cccc179f102af5ae461293d7f07f7
describe
'432630' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABNR' 'sip-files00058.jp2'
aeff7dc5af4a23079f58d2e92addde99
b7fa83404589932dfd11e2ade9c5528a6d3f253d
describe
'103212' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABNS' 'sip-files00058.jpg'
cf184a54d9b8cc954927a605860fb47a
1b51a0d08f491bbed6e389e2e696f30bbd6f745d
describe
'38712' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABNT' 'sip-files00058.pro'
dcc85a49dde7a0895a98d328a892ae2d
6881ab403f178312efb2ac31e4df2e76b9a4e2af
describe
'32647' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABNU' 'sip-files00058.QC.jpg'
5ad9a3742f722f1941cd2bc3690d7b9f
06f0b8db375fae52f877abf1a81d05ea76874668
describe
'3469476' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABNV' 'sip-files00058.tif'
e8b47547894e9c81bc2ae025e53040cc
f4c89680235649732520f8071609eb19c31a3f6c
describe
'1532' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABNW' 'sip-files00058.txt'
01de65cfac467612f5066f9d79b282d9
a54377df001fb815740919cb7b295cd23ccc8fa2
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABNX' 'sip-files00058thm.jpg'
8cb0e780e8a6f273ba28bc9976cbdaed
bebc11fc9e245b074e49d8a23b71246ec391cb55
describe
'433074' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABNY' 'sip-files00059.jp2'
8ac8ae9ff2e1ba49eada8d25e0d7713d
43f2ebdc1d998f337955acc7ce3c4709efef5ba3
describe
'80357' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABNZ' 'sip-files00059.jpg'
20432ec3f9db0007c1ab832660fd5321
3fca7570b707e37ec30284d79d55cb35e13def9f
describe
'28852' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABOA' 'sip-files00059.pro'
cfc2303598a9c8494c8d437f38623d73
9b3a3024f0df9ab85146f2a3190fe6fc2d7ad181
describe
'25710' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABOB' 'sip-files00059.QC.jpg'
e36bb079ce5258088cd121da5402c558
9a83b1aabce51f934cc52a3196b132dda1207c01
describe
'3473028' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABOC' 'sip-files00059.tif'
8e9bfcd9ae16b50d93a6c001bd575ca0
e9606bba6164db39f00ea126073795ee9fda94ef
describe
'1197' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABOD' 'sip-files00059.txt'
6cfb382b01a045e06fe90be890dc382e
c6446b5c648ad973e17f60fb04b266eef1463992
describe
'6043' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABOE' 'sip-files00059thm.jpg'
0e968fed850bba1a83b1ab62fb3f6fa0
244c520ab190a3f8e75d36130a9005551d4635ad
describe
'432794' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABOF' 'sip-files00060.jp2'
421962dad9df7cd7b6754793b8797289
7ffeb256c15c4fa131faa3da9d87254f54484952
describe
'101094' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABOG' 'sip-files00060.jpg'
278751daf91736ef8bcde8af5483c5b6
a5c71934b3ffc6d27341ffb258f246a3f4cc5ec0
describe
'37124' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABOH' 'sip-files00060.pro'
4b4ad14a5162bd2b98c5ae1ec82d0eb3
8ae8b35a008cad117429f44fdfa557a0cd68f983
describe
'32585' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABOI' 'sip-files00060.QC.jpg'
2006adf10b529578fb3ecff7b7c2f299
8471899af81612ccef8177d55c520e2e4e8fbf0b
describe
'3471068' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABOJ' 'sip-files00060.tif'
5f899ba6f301472a6e0b062f896674b4
77b1bcae6784c88322a9088ae3e03ec5bf43df1c
describe
'1480' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABOK' 'sip-files00060.txt'
ecf16093c776a823504e3e8841ee701c
9bc7473c03bda2b0e25228b2b971ce5dace6482a
'2011-11-08T01:19:58-05:00'
describe
'8044' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABOL' 'sip-files00060thm.jpg'
91056639461ecab9ec75aaaeb12697a6
331c1b7e5988b2df3f31c4908f9ca763ec210c66
describe
'433004' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABOM' 'sip-files00061.jp2'
1261b3bcec03db7c0df4ae54dadea496
bcea88212702691f9c34afee6bcfb9418042a009
describe
'101577' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABON' 'sip-files00061.jpg'
55c74dd23f8da21cf2801930007d83d8
5efb23edc80879a91da71af6ace39ed3ae6b424c
'2011-11-08T01:21:36-05:00'
describe
'36705' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABOO' 'sip-files00061.pro'
9893c8f7c532a70661d363da4f5fd8ab
368bd471140450a47f61ed1bd1cb919f56ed8fd3
describe
'32168' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABOP' 'sip-files00061.QC.jpg'
03bc83f8af24b49dd3762dbe4fbf7b14
0608118d94a028387d1345f6186699ac5148231b
describe
'3473316' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABOQ' 'sip-files00061.tif'
ea1652f9730625ad7320812061af48d8
80b2a43dbee7c2c4d5d137a46437814bdb4b6f28
describe
'1486' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABOR' 'sip-files00061.txt'
e7459f3617af0aceff6361d4fb24b462
ba09f8c01ad82870901201ddfea9c0c4e395c9a3
describe
'7825' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABOS' 'sip-files00061thm.jpg'
ae29f8d4826ed2d5ea28dfab434c16fc
cd898b0edfc9f872c481097a3cc79114c04daade
describe
'432821' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABOT' 'sip-files00062.jp2'
0290f3d5dc73fbdbdbd4d18c021589df
e572548717a4eddb272cff83436f800cb244a228
describe
'90667' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABOU' 'sip-files00062.jpg'
5008885216bc7b7f37c4e5b071ac0930
1828d493d62947e23d2dda090f0050e665b5c617
describe
'33690' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABOV' 'sip-files00062.pro'
007021474069d200728624324cccef49
568cc4fa1073429e1e82826e4e9126e0a53e5c2e
describe
'29027' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABOW' 'sip-files00062.QC.jpg'
dce96f8efc8137a2cb2c89042e3bb070
831d370035b42d97f44e537093a3b26ea5b7b16d
describe
'3470896' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABOX' 'sip-files00062.tif'
c28fefd010301070a93a6189eccb87eb
4b0e3b201026007f0bc2e57f2df60aa7bf54f4e3
'2011-11-08T01:20:04-05:00'
describe
'1353' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABOY' 'sip-files00062.txt'
d2408ac99c8b29b0deb96881ac0a9ee8
beae5552551a059368749fce66f229910997d692
describe
'7157' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABOZ' 'sip-files00062thm.jpg'
f7ff95acc4f49f1118c84c1e456ee350
3c4e4d35691ff0de196165c03a7325c052b392b1
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABPA' 'sip-files00063.jp2'
c12d410e84d8a071e39fb3cd7921485e
e81a503b6201f43aef831e5a723290a954ed959a
'2011-11-08T01:21:30-05:00'
describe
'94105' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABPB' 'sip-files00063.jpg'
5c8f393ee726767c5466cda41d585cd6
8290b38327e06be47b207b5201b06956bd6cb430
describe
'23438' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABPC' 'sip-files00063.pro'
62004ee7be317cd44d3274a31976d42e
19239973348016c37b6341c0a1f62541ed82df4e
describe
'27911' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABPD' 'sip-files00063.QC.jpg'
e8a75b455128349c3e6cbac34a18b4f6
9c05f0fb7dd5ba8f8b9d6612607f3db671e761fd
describe
'3473144' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABPE' 'sip-files00063.tif'
11ca777c9ac1928c4fd84961e093df79
e354d867d480021a3c308e9786ae5a68c62d10b9
describe
'967' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABPF' 'sip-files00063.txt'
238dafc8f6fccf21279e9d3b5c5c5a52
43fa0cac3e886a47344954920b16809075375919
describe
'7089' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABPG' 'sip-files00063thm.jpg'
c50d62805903764c6c076f88015afc48
37e2ea05eebab5e4beb83337c94aa9100e145675
describe
'425878' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABPH' 'sip-files00064.jp2'
91f352745be7ffee9cfa742cd7668b14
e9cf2971291ca3c06b6c5212c38a59bb4bf05cbc
describe
'103626' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABPI' 'sip-files00064.jpg'
a6f0fc4f180cd11cceaf1718d0bae26a
c5111528e5779fca4d3efa2f19cde57ccbd1b39d
describe
'38814' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABPJ' 'sip-files00064.pro'
438ba9812c3a2170e7be8a928532a33e
31e6a50da7c348c2bf3cd90a489f18799f8893a6
describe
'32719' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABPK' 'sip-files00064.QC.jpg'
1932f476819e14a12984c7bbef832ca5
4ff9121c7f09e43ae24ebb967f2bf7d568502e3b
describe
'3416120' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABPL' 'sip-files00064.tif'
c445aa12ea5d90fc99451d7e52928190
3d05aab0bdc50194f496d3f4c337bd85a68d94b9
describe
'1542' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABPM' 'sip-files00064.txt'
d99a0a70bfba5d6eb71a4e54342e8d94
7969da82819373cbf29abf4338726615182cf01a
describe
'8297' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABPN' 'sip-files00064thm.jpg'
35580048ee257ddfa89f146b090a76ca
029f61c24207aef82e109a1ba2de02d00da21b10
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABPO' 'sip-files00065.jp2'
603793e42b03fc560fe2d3caf6084dd2
dcde03a72b0c67db5cf340d786305cf6472da7f3
describe
'101661' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABPP' 'sip-files00065.jpg'
ac59c45a91d10e808ddc80ea5c56848f
cbf1c6f38737cb493952588ded47f90130a87bc3
describe
'38144' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABPQ' 'sip-files00065.pro'
ecdea767cc6b0e3c60d81ff622c14f8f
f8ff8887388faeba000b49d0d21c7444711ac847
describe
'31959' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABPR' 'sip-files00065.QC.jpg'
c006883b48b0519c2590c35754206ce1
eb3d5dd85aeab82bcf3d9198108dd2fde774efd4
describe
'3473244' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABPS' 'sip-files00065.tif'
25642267065627c1a95cfe63191b767d
6c962d6f6a63a550ce59aa88334b1ec9bb1c4c2b
describe
'1519' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABPT' 'sip-files00065.txt'
1e3702c7b6e726ddef9e8ad4fcd4abcd
d982846edf851d2080781e0f6bed3dab54c786a5
describe
'7874' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABPU' 'sip-files00065thm.jpg'
08af79677cda6f1ee843466dd03731b9
4eaed39bd100563e1ee8824669f670cb8a545c03
describe
'433093' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABPV' 'sip-files00066.jp2'
1e296d905ca41797195e78d7057a1d36
a7e0ebd24b3dde7faae06c1e6695a96e81643821
'2011-11-08T01:20:10-05:00'
describe
'104392' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABPW' 'sip-files00066.jpg'
535fe37718ee9c4d24b4be48f6563445
39cf9ef457d525d1d385f926e8e206d60dc15fd7
describe
'39597' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABPX' 'sip-files00066.pro'
1d4bd47591615ae0e3ce12ab02c164a6
8ec5a0a85d8ddbaf473930571f37ee2b11b44b84
describe
'32739' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABPY' 'sip-files00066.QC.jpg'
fbb4ca7a5e3b23c6732f39a7c1defdbd
1027aac40bc428db25eb774f1c98431704aeb053
describe
'3473292' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABPZ' 'sip-files00066.tif'
9fc7820a9deb3964f22cb505bb1d20e9
69fd99e237744807b71e3b47cbe049f8cd6a9290
describe
'1561' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABQA' 'sip-files00066.txt'
747d365cae1b23cebc4a15894cc2b3f4
af73c8c4e72110aaefa512a03d9fad67e9e206fa
describe
'8099' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABQB' 'sip-files00066thm.jpg'
81a6a6eadee8e6f6f5660b0b8ea7a649
7f9439483503a2c0250d55b01bd67e1f4a1b26b6
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABQC' 'sip-files00067.jp2'
9eb913aabeab3b95d33f9a03fc179635
326ef92ad28fa50fa23aa8205e0d156ebe5f254a
describe
'149202' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABQD' 'sip-files00067.jpg'
1655ec2da294a66b0d3a63950449f9d8
5684ebf475f60b77a04d6f2e320628f50ba57534
describe
'33672' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABQE' 'sip-files00067.QC.jpg'
e9c854858943e866fcb7dbb4d0db3780
5f463c6bde5fca30296c1895f35cae8041c51fbe
describe
'3473476' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABQF' 'sip-files00067.tif'
c4c91aee2a97f95afb88f49a8cb583e5
015e7142fc9dac02f53347de5fcc47ee5ec6b89e
describe
'7803' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABQG' 'sip-files00067thm.jpg'
675fab6e70383e852c34c76ce2fe5bb7
3722b7fabc9bd1d6751cbf325f7098bfd5e366f9
describe
'122454' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABQH' 'sip-files00068.jp2'
15e50c34faedd21b68a20a6cd304bd3f
828e22042569d30f696551e64db9eea803e83ac3
describe
'9247' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABQI' 'sip-files00068.jpg'
604f2d2de6979aaf2b1125415b3b6dab
801ce80719d02ef5a180dfee197e8e1bb1df6d96
describe
'2607' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABQJ' 'sip-files00068.QC.jpg'
636a07956344dd1e8a8b05a2890ce31b
018fb195cfbd4d109ea14f1393bf586626d8e2ee
describe
'3471128' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABQK' 'sip-files00068.tif'
8c2ca851ae925837ec1ae5af7c67f35c
b08e6c280e7a97887b524143b41da443ad529a94
describe
'908' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABQL' 'sip-files00068thm.jpg'
195e7691800e11b34c2353590df63cd6
2e3eb21da28fe9debaaa386693c20606c9c662bb
describe
'433076' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABQM' 'sip-files00069.jp2'
590ee84546a08ae04fbeb09abf9bb8c1
541e8f1c033ccee10cbb1365f0d39949ae82b168
describe
'99264' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABQN' 'sip-files00069.jpg'
10bab0003d41bef9ba93be299adef6e7
e85e3c9d54ce28f051ca3ad82f85e5700cd5e37d
describe
'35949' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABQO' 'sip-files00069.pro'
a6124305c1e9e030ef95b8922717dbca
aa1a8b311d96816736ffc889c89354f63d607a04
describe
'31719' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABQP' 'sip-files00069.QC.jpg'
3eb938ad100a7ec692ee4dac1f7ff1c7
6bce4e2f957f0daee214881ae58672808294b196
'2011-11-08T01:21:47-05:00'
describe
'3473444' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABQQ' 'sip-files00069.tif'
fa7a42c3b4b053091121a564f3f8240c
1eb0b89448a770d6ddf7ea4c1f46f683d4a293e0
describe
'1431' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABQR' 'sip-files00069.txt'
c639ec1fe257fa67dc437f007f083147
bcba71d930fcdccc43b2db21d8ad7bf821a6a934
describe
'8042' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABQS' 'sip-files00069thm.jpg'
c505f4e0e5e637550d4200ea853c6e3a
ef457ced5b830a1004781bc765d2586cbfac8199
describe
'433079' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABQT' 'sip-files00070.jp2'
c301b728770313a23ce1b08d0f7fae35
01ad0bdd19bab9326c15df3c680a86d6c0b138d0
describe
'97355' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABQU' 'sip-files00070.jpg'
f11f0fa749d29b7b8dc1d6bde2f7a022
dbdc34df9a2ba6e2977dffd77de4161d07cb3cca
describe
'35418' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABQV' 'sip-files00070.pro'
1682e661a666c71082a24f444f058ccc
efca8412caff48e8d197d3a6e71ddb747641eb31
describe
'30881' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABQW' 'sip-files00070.QC.jpg'
82ee43e73c0723b2873d85db8cd64428
f9d5ad9800bd5876932e96dffa93e9c9afd2bfa3
describe
'3473520' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABQX' 'sip-files00070.tif'
be9e1a26953bc23cbcee2e14edf0a44e
916fc48fd6a6092aa6f920e5c8539fd4adf26e43
describe
'1426' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABQY' 'sip-files00070.txt'
f69633533838db29f22d374dda458c06
327f7f09c7ca140fe32973e78273b91ea97e3c39
describe
'7782' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABQZ' 'sip-files00070thm.jpg'
1886d76cadf626595d1b4082c113cd98
fe6d41d4f570e3731ccbf7c612dcc2ad2ad5e84c
describe
'417342' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABRA' 'sip-files00071.jp2'
6722521d2112221de2158983626cd076
0bc07c4a7044dcde1527f1959b3c7bdd649e47a2
describe
'48258' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABRB' 'sip-files00071.jpg'
e9ce31a02ae3e454b7754d62fa760e4c
ae571afcff3f75efb391aa8e3a54a23336db3940
describe
'15628' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABRC' 'sip-files00071.pro'
a0bae458ac2206cbb612bebd2c812e45
a88b31984ea2a65df85b945da8ca3ab48ed0f1fb
describe
'15023' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABRD' 'sip-files00071.QC.jpg'
3caee0836a3ee28bb9c1c8ab0e989cc0
3f48f4ccc1c8f378d9b171d81b5ba473e4a87361
describe
'3472176' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABRE' 'sip-files00071.tif'
440756c17aac9b491e7bf952d63a37b7
46c7322ce233b9eeaa6a3779b76bfb52c79ef174
describe
'651' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABRF' 'sip-files00071.txt'
2f0cc783cb65d305e7728e77a8730249
f90b207db5c545367a1e374b5e95145e34c1ba6b
describe
'4056' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABRG' 'sip-files00071thm.jpg'
c2b6f1106bfc99d837c133734d56c0a0
3125c446d4ad15af0fdbf2df11141170a08f8832
describe
'433097' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABRH' 'sip-files00072.jp2'
0a3689624e4188b897756a1ad8b28ac3
394bede6ffe0f8d87ad5e67acf4ef112de1e7bb4
describe
'86404' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABRI' 'sip-files00072.jpg'
f4cb97e64e25ddc697e2af75f58557d8
1940e8426f5afac8b2adcb4b2c4509bfe1d89f7f
describe
'30682' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABRJ' 'sip-files00072.pro'
0d70e11f6481f2917d37b19044fa86dd
e6d638627d7d528bada57c24ca879fec7990f0f0
describe
'27067' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABRK' 'sip-files00072.QC.jpg'
85ce481762bf12effed9b7eaa7cd7c68
88c5bfae26429ef256758eae82767cec0527e60a
describe
'3473060' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABRL' 'sip-files00072.tif'
cd616a28320c8ab03036a27b78136310
0aaaba6d7cad65959680da9695631f11e66abb31
describe
'1249' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABRM' 'sip-files00072.txt'
fcd446d71afc8e81f952818d15348771
1a786e371d4cfac32bf194abe318da6417c40d18
describe
'6663' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABRN' 'sip-files00072thm.jpg'
ebb73a6ef6f816d06fad854196510c07
14c7bdfe4c9144fc9485e7fcb5ae743514281001
describe
'433058' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABRO' 'sip-files00073.jp2'
122e7a4c5e02626daf9b112781a3413a
c31d564bc08eef321005e8444aafcc9b2f840203
describe
'88008' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABRP' 'sip-files00073.jpg'
3e1ecabad5b3d18214fcba496fc7203a
5545a70a9bdfc9185c2ca38e8810d6023a0ae52b
describe
'21001' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABRQ' 'sip-files00073.pro'
86738e151279ba9dc41aef188ce702ba
4b1faf939b6f201280939d5a39a6e0bed437009f
describe
'26079' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABRR' 'sip-files00073.QC.jpg'
8e94265d1d05e11b639a6813c237af1d
c601432bc8b78a87937f60d03be2b97938a9a51e
describe
'3473160' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABRS' 'sip-files00073.tif'
49dc70924a5c950a4f4d3dc0a7839799
64d791ec94d781d34cdbe0860e5fd8c744573762
describe
'881' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABRT' 'sip-files00073.txt'
3661ad363826961834fcc0d38cceec89
40077d83581cb740c05258392a8b1e41bd566cd1
describe
'6835' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABRU' 'sip-files00073thm.jpg'
ff5de2132400b85e081b1cb2d8c6da13
9bce685fd72add2764fd447829adfb4ae09a9dd7
describe
'432781' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABRV' 'sip-files00074.jp2'
d2fcbe17f74f54dab6f0c64b1a6febae
dcc353bd66890a9316b138e5faa6341e28a3a3f3
describe
'101175' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABRW' 'sip-files00074.jpg'
387f25af9f2d33d05ec9fce2c730d1bf
7970ba96e4095639b369891f530aa3cb69be4e8c
describe
'37346' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABRX' 'sip-files00074.pro'
be0136c2f5b86a8e06ccbda63025536e
6c22c9c9214e2d3b03badcb6a0204ce0aac3c003
describe
'32476' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABRY' 'sip-files00074.QC.jpg'
9d15b658819713181541d404703bc719
91b662748e7468dc14c5bd1a2185b3adf533d68f
describe
'3471196' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABRZ' 'sip-files00074.tif'
2feb585549c8f136c89f56b5297d2e73
a927173556ab9ffb7c59c326f341dd88b398fcfa
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABSA' 'sip-files00074.txt'
1f8bee6bad8516e03417222041ef5c12
ecea4d40992f6157deac4f1629b312c83ee59763
describe
'8182' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABSB' 'sip-files00074thm.jpg'
fc96373fba417b3a124cd1a50a4b1c62
ce5295fbb6af73a56be3a55d5ec44305aad4bce9
describe
'433109' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABSC' 'sip-files00075.jp2'
21bc7972fda6c87f01a9950c50893295
abbdffea3705426c91ca8598cd238faad18d2020
describe
'114675' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABSD' 'sip-files00075.jpg'
7cff07ee1eb0c209ed20b942dd61c5a6
af8c22580b4ed7d6d1448b5f493da5d1649252c6
describe
'41962' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABSE' 'sip-files00075.pro'
4a312c6068aa13b1c17c9521a0c271b5
43d8b4944446b64f2278ab0dc9f29728b7baa713
describe
'35316' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABSF' 'sip-files00075.QC.jpg'
2e0c08d527170c45cd1a836b23b41959
5e1d1b88469286d15e39f3f350e1b050054603f8
describe
'3473648' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABSG' 'sip-files00075.tif'
784b1096efd9f38b760b977a720586fa
7221f8b9ddf8ff3a025f3244e3a315e9515691f0
describe
'1663' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABSH' 'sip-files00075.txt'
b403b9d3d277bf4bcb7d235f4b27e861
eb627ca74380a7f1a259028be811940de9265079
describe
'8525' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABSI' 'sip-files00075thm.jpg'
38750ba32c148c409f0e9ccc03c7e483
eadda7e930fa98c53c3afd687e957aab49017afe
describe
'432816' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABSJ' 'sip-files00076.jp2'
e1fe39a730c33e7e24b558878eb6faaa
aa3fa3375a4b06c84f3ae6ff3086743006778b35
describe
'99903' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABSK' 'sip-files00076.jpg'
be14727079fdf365f7a86a49813feaf5
78a3441d2588f44486efb5a300453cb6e6ff5c19
describe
'36077' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABSL' 'sip-files00076.pro'
5a745747a53795172eea2c885fe7cb0a
4ce77bd89c40e19a49ed45b18f3cbcb52059612a
describe
'32355' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABSM' 'sip-files00076.QC.jpg'
d39fcc74d85507fc42af2f792ccaa8ce
c9162aa404cd99234907375bf7daedcbf8cfffdc
describe
'3471164' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABSN' 'sip-files00076.tif'
f85f26816bd912a5b87c63f52ca45739
625acd1973f1e828b7bd9b4da60f6b6fb7ebe093
describe
'1502' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABSO' 'sip-files00076.txt'
e0d0c7635296bdad36618b52e48aed41
c30cd8868f4deaa642b36f89bc209f44cabbe9f5
describe
'7976' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABSP' 'sip-files00076thm.jpg'
f54ec2256a3061def1a79f5b16fef477
87766ec70b77374b1505c2233a9f86014aa1e8f0
describe
'433104' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABSQ' 'sip-files00077.jp2'
47486c134c345769e8727d6756950ee4
6569bc0ff3a9a1e809ba5215e6aaacbbca1edacc
describe
'100341' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABSR' 'sip-files00077.jpg'
8d862941ff196d71eac89948859402b7
fd4be046f0df891a4f484e9606f39bd80ad05133
describe
'384' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABSS' 'sip-files00077.pro'
25905ac7470766e5b28db02a4a33c7b0
ce0807551dbd0f8bc9eeaf460f4c0b9507016581
describe
'23851' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABST' 'sip-files00077.QC.jpg'
9ebadf5ea5c927894b9a070c17cdf968
38c7ebfe7d161fd52b268b68adf07f46f2b2566f
describe
'3472948' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABSU' 'sip-files00077.tif'
7e58f88f88e9a214b966594bf8479aea
32586e3d17da56c9933274ccbeb038e72c909828
describe
'114' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABSV' 'sip-files00077.txt'
a5880f10bfb0235a280afa3877259b3e
7292fd5ec335f2bffc837bdb1621ad249a5cbeb5
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABSW' 'sip-files00077thm.jpg'
d8ea761c9aeaa3af37509c0ea7ae9658
8665a0e76b52ba2846418b5c3aa729ddbf0caa0d
describe
'183269' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABSX' 'sip-files00078.jp2'
fb777ee21ad929572a1b397d7a5d8c4a
620a7a966a2e1f051ed88e8a7df5c5ab6dfb2ca1
describe
'9500' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABSY' 'sip-files00078.jpg'
8687dbc7640dfd367de76d254a1bf4a9
cf7c1136a67781f343baeebb9615b4a33325d336
describe
'2624' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABSZ' 'sip-files00078.QC.jpg'
25dd651bef6ce5f6807dd82f4b8d65e0
9a6f193887491da7c7352297e1440d4d94179a09
describe
'3471140' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABTA' 'sip-files00078.tif'
9633cad07eddb383d0603ffd07ff2557
1dd3615f09a58c401c41a7d83eb2cebae8b9f9aa
describe
'898' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABTB' 'sip-files00078thm.jpg'
5ede6102ef042d5ca52b2456f40da644
634d428e3eb45a9c5fec84a7e5e8760d34022678
describe
'433106' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABTC' 'sip-files00079.jp2'
70d95de0acac4764eea383bcfab2007f
52c39409f0be5192425e9cc0cfd26e9f071dbbd1
describe
'110798' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABTD' 'sip-files00079.jpg'
50785675f94e8fcc4bfc0cb48392326b
5545737e13cdf0e99ffe705810a6ae5e74d26ef2
describe
'39947' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABTE' 'sip-files00079.pro'
016cc39e910c2d4d4ed55a495696c7b4
987af4d249a378dc2ed762ce93addf76868bbac9
describe
'34447' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABTF' 'sip-files00079.QC.jpg'
7b5b6bf5b9e2cd724c8218408a579202
d45ab1c45d53970853bfa4fedb9ea422c7c0ee03
describe
'3473364' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABTG' 'sip-files00079.tif'
547850166dbd0396f2b233de18007d2e
41da987226513f8b3be0cf5ebf52a9da69e7aa45
describe
'1587' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABTH' 'sip-files00079.txt'
15766ac2087834ffd46ba9cc24eae2f8
306d1d94c29ed498ffeecc6f9cb1b821e1c527c8
describe
'8108' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABTI' 'sip-files00079thm.jpg'
9c32dbf7b5d02d5d75660cfc5682660f
2a53b5b8911b81de56ca184ed4129f74d6de2baf
describe
'433063' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABTJ' 'sip-files00080.jp2'
d6decc39f42c0b992a24599de8ec055e
77251a42177daf94545159075c9cfbad39cb1258
describe
'98269' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABTK' 'sip-files00080.jpg'
8b28b8072d5c1d6573ec18c214f44625
4cb2e2816ec1cf556f31dd627d14a5220194223d
describe
'36270' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABTL' 'sip-files00080.pro'
f4fa0ce884675395e79ba12e25700e72
587d9f6c0f2459e23043084785566acea60f1565
describe
'31432' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABTM' 'sip-files00080.QC.jpg'
d3c29e54fe5570c834ce6e7e16f9a7a5
23a5520f6b9fd5bc6de0f6d351c588c25ce60f8c
describe
'3473380' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABTN' 'sip-files00080.tif'
94a78fdec9524130c6ea05b0d5e336ba
c3eb05a1849da285dcd644155472ceda7d8dc4a7
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABTO' 'sip-files00080.txt'
568917522c7d4144c803dde9e12f8aa9
a6431a8574fea60c7ed4ac54c3d431837f2c9cf0
'2011-11-08T01:20:16-05:00'
describe
'7626' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABTP' 'sip-files00080thm.jpg'
a1900399e25fca0b922b4e8d8ae45997
bd4d9d4f0439757e65b7f80fdc17eb1aeba636c3
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABTQ' 'sip-files00081.jp2'
349ff25579d6217fe60721a11699c09d
7e13b01353637217d407b93c65a8808325030673
describe
'106127' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABTR' 'sip-files00081.jpg'
147ab30c2d2310b2f680f68e2f604849
8f65f1a0c7f6e2357ebcc6935af0651a8424d1de
describe
'38038' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABTS' 'sip-files00081.pro'
471486f6cbd5b9561f6eef7605596511
f976a9a1b31de9d14fe9493406a21f0f5a5c2649
describe
'33895' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABTT' 'sip-files00081.QC.jpg'
305f61f234f282a54376845cb89c2923
1bbc10748bec1ef01f0512edfc824f70d6535af8
describe
'3473440' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABTU' 'sip-files00081.tif'
93254be4e8b08182fe26ca2dc5146715
0403516dca33c69fba9c414286a5e5c9ff2c380e
describe
'1523' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABTV' 'sip-files00081.txt'
a6f4080ca100281b240daa06de24b0dc
2d6beedfbdc0a167f92760039ac0285848fcf64b
describe
'7885' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABTW' 'sip-files00081thm.jpg'
dc9e3466abc0346ed83610ea3d73efc3
bb3e2e29247ea1aea36155e256505f2cca44c24f
describe
'432858' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABTX' 'sip-files00082.jp2'
dc5ab16fa82b0706972c6e21710608aa
9632d879a25be76aad7954c7a50e37c947b56ea0
describe
'100871' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABTY' 'sip-files00082.jpg'
44cd69797a1a7e5082f0460b0e703dfd
da26d2f8a2c5a4abfe94883e1a6c4e796fa91ded
describe
'34935' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABTZ' 'sip-files00082.pro'
a05284f92a9d58bf66fbd584922b40bc
82e9685da69379137bf436f141d73f9ab2eec3b5
describe
'32206' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABUA' 'sip-files00082.QC.jpg'
29b5cc4471a2f65c1321e2e194f010b1
d31fd1ffeb42a7fd68668ae38e61e6204a4cd726
describe
'3472064' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABUB' 'sip-files00082.tif'
b7f7fbe1aec912e14cb17a333c71b3bc
964e32b8c08b9f6f6fa4a042ed7119d22e29bae4
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABUC' 'sip-files00082.txt'
38854b3457172f31a8d77e84f1edb15c
8ed22f3f19e532e97c81b5089f4b6ea29ff0247b
describe
'7697' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABUD' 'sip-files00082thm.jpg'
00c51fa6351ef3e7353c053399211e6c
1ce4d3a5f14c261c4268d3625c0ebaea9bf4ccb7
describe
'432776' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABUE' 'sip-files00083.jp2'
d85fb0142e63ab9d3a4631297cc78070
38fece591132a8fb1e372a91d2e1df0820711840
describe
'80033' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABUF' 'sip-files00083.jpg'
6266f33181958108244d459cf314a0d4
8b8154dc2e49a97b963f09a1f34a99de4f8c5627
describe
'27522' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABUG' 'sip-files00083.pro'
bb57adba6cd8d608432988ed9d6cf4e6
f8af80b431712884227bed317024aa5d125751e4
describe
'25663' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABUH' 'sip-files00083.QC.jpg'
b74c001af28a6273bb47ba070b70b411
ba623a6a89b5fed822c916ddca6b52fbb80c4a62
describe
'3470572' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABUI' 'sip-files00083.tif'
fbac19aae611a380d2dff350f87f5b87
1ce7a1a3293cf20a1bdf76eb610c7475fef9afd4
describe
'1102' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABUJ' 'sip-files00083.txt'
2d1a79cc84cf8e0a064149c6b1a42184
35b2572498da2c1ac2948a7a28714dca817dd4fa
describe
'6329' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABUK' 'sip-files00083thm.jpg'
c7a4efcbfed2a460b9886da631376543
3176c92c3edf6f9525f8de3d0800c2b8ad21d927
describe
'432798' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABUL' 'sip-files00084.jp2'
f922db9c29b1bf72a274d3647861daaf
97f3773bd5f6dac3375f7135b4fd9475a737feee
describe
'81860' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABUM' 'sip-files00084.jpg'
cc1893229f0a041999ac8fc4412ae665
4241dfddac6bee1ddbc5e4dea1e7f09d5931d862
describe
'28551' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABUN' 'sip-files00084.pro'
516b9e613fa686998c75e7eddda2134b
35eaad77df60df36654cb4395dbcda010624b0cf
describe
'26416' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABUO' 'sip-files00084.QC.jpg'
bc18c3669082a35dae693bd44651e6fe
22d7566c3c22358abf3f6565e29b0629318b395c
describe
'3470712' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABUP' 'sip-files00084.tif'
6535133ee6a79e5ffe3e59f735910e5e
c5f7120644762ff52e0f650621bfb66fbc9b0cf7
describe
'1198' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABUQ' 'sip-files00084.txt'
1e8b766f8da57614b5b78804c82f6885
ee7a28cc4ecfa3b85c29b1bd58edf1a456698d6b
describe
'6372' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABUR' 'sip-files00084thm.jpg'
38964ca83bcf80000021cff5984c86b4
ab1a3b79f0466f63014643b125bd9612ed9002de
describe
'433048' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABUS' 'sip-files00085.jp2'
244fc635cb30c732479faf419c354cb6
e74be7039fc4a6df281da9d365cabedba0bab7fc
describe
'101277' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABUT' 'sip-files00085.jpg'
fab7060d1df164441912666f7045d252
5228a16edba1f8644da5b4c1a55ec2bafecca804
describe
'37013' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABUU' 'sip-files00085.pro'
1a836672b17f4a5e2fbad66092f5f7c3
2c61f95b928bc5b348bb3eec9aec8a32386dcc89
describe
'33242' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABUV' 'sip-files00085.QC.jpg'
21da558b4a63869044312182ad9935f3
d8949e38cf80623422fef639aac8869a12060c38
describe
'3473356' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABUW' 'sip-files00085.tif'
3a5f95cdddba11e91c78ab553f32b2e3
4ac5115c935dcbb06be17a8dc698a7a2e21da367
describe
'1471' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABUX' 'sip-files00085.txt'
e3d1f63c299d04838ad0e227e33fe23b
2750af7352cb17105c9825dc856e330a298bb60b
describe
'7821' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABUY' 'sip-files00085thm.jpg'
c72c21790c3db9b2d6cda92017c628b0
5cc062b849a13a0263c36c8559c1d513f7af8824
describe
'432823' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABUZ' 'sip-files00086.jp2'
51c0207ad3070f5731743068bc253bed
6fdc58290b9158991d7ddbc917e9f8f79c8812b0
describe
'103655' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABVA' 'sip-files00086.jpg'
9b5daaea6bc9a56bd009831e05a20783
e73ed7c14a8c162024af05d6ef3056dadfc31295
describe
'38290' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABVB' 'sip-files00086.pro'
6443dadff2557ebe88110e115e7bdd6b
11c2ce0bf6c50c6c8346d3cbbb262a91d303eabb
describe
'33127' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABVC' 'sip-files00086.QC.jpg'
65cf01d58f70ed5fb7c878a0d491f661
aa687d898a3891a5ad5b70099c3749a293cd38ba
describe
'3471172' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABVD' 'sip-files00086.tif'
ade79122de3b5757e4451dd0517570b2
2a97746466105a83d924ad0efd8405677cb4967f
describe
'1518' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABVE' 'sip-files00086.txt'
b359e2af1c63d85f399fe8a6634cc14b
5012839c97a369c6330f3693f0b95a04ced7410c
describe
'7595' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABVF' 'sip-files00086thm.jpg'
58ce069cd5b2e8ccc44cfb9bfea87473
9ec5a181baf10c86e7b39e7755eca1c975fb4082
describe
'433054' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABVG' 'sip-files00087.jp2'
99ab5a4eaa8c0306fe6534e38a1b5d94
434458d56d0750f4ec85481439039fb3ef17f7e6
describe
'89525' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABVH' 'sip-files00087.jpg'
7cb4b8819c4645a40da15ce38cb85408
6dda6dab33db4e207b6e6c85c702b047559cc3c4
describe
'17111' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABVI' 'sip-files00087.pro'
4d1dc4721d0e13b4174de4de569b5ecf
2fa805c171c6b4d01e335799f473966369d1c9a5
describe
'26446' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABVJ' 'sip-files00087.QC.jpg'
54fa60eec46d2dead2a8b97a710d628b
2bf0bab9b90eabcb223ad6bd3cabb3cf3cd26a6a
describe
'3473352' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABVK' 'sip-files00087.tif'
e6153c8e4bfad6e271e3a14830b1dd45
b60d10e77d8c6306eae17539ab5c63daf3bb56af
describe
'785' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABVL' 'sip-files00087.txt'
828d1c9d549ff3457434dc7948c2588c
d0064a5c1384295338ba396b8ec807ac1d3b0631
describe
'6863' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABVM' 'sip-files00087thm.jpg'
64c3e61b09957b5a8e6c5cab34692e77
2f9878106e325fe5adce6ad0d73488063aa37f05
describe
'432779' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABVN' 'sip-files00088.jp2'
713e9ae0070336965a65163c0dbcc6d6
0a593a80bd3f9eb2715f0466727c45c7b221675e
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABVO' 'sip-files00088.jpg'
96ce6c33e9f54b3779ac54a3f3ec2f5f
c73997d85975a95fe06cc706fa487233e3d3daa5
describe
'35871' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABVP' 'sip-files00088.pro'
2808e46abae11c049183101150455127
d97cce3abd2d4a31410d1cab6834a643840568e7
describe
'31691' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABVQ' 'sip-files00088.QC.jpg'
b82a9ddf12c680a995d9ce5421eee302
8fc082606bf0be9f4e7b77a80cdef01278419cfb
describe
'3471108' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABVR' 'sip-files00088.tif'
92b459eeaae771d1006e4176028f0321
ee6f32040f849af866c8a7ceea1e439a43158a91
describe
'1465' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABVS' 'sip-files00088.txt'
8cb75b424c757d21de596e4f1312cb88
6e703e4209d74b4dca87196e7eba79b7814e1d7c
describe
'7977' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABVT' 'sip-files00088thm.jpg'
9eb891a6a88a44539f2d16e0324e601b
f30f723bba66488c90da3d1ca3b9b8e731307d79
describe
'433073' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABVU' 'sip-files00089.jp2'
be5746c69504ee72cee3aa597b0f764a
c72204ad8c185f268d4924bc1ad6db21467a63e0
describe
'104784' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABVV' 'sip-files00089.jpg'
556226501a16c7b5d8a25f4f39ba31fb
0cd0256d912fab609acbccf8514e4df49a706f56
describe
'38735' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABVW' 'sip-files00089.pro'
f571e1df9caad8df51c18c2dfa63712e
daa3866db5d4cc29035d8582be4805664c26cdf9
describe
'32788' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABVX' 'sip-files00089.QC.jpg'
c033f78a6a02239e5192c6a8feda9957
32e6aecfcd4400e01394c7dc5d5101ad2e955b93
describe
'3473488' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABVY' 'sip-files00089.tif'
7d764d00a5338f7efd8d1a3b962c9696
728e55c9d4da13e3cb6333a8a86bb8992e09e9c9
describe
'1544' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABVZ' 'sip-files00089.txt'
e1355c7686659f7e752ec80693d056dd
d22249fd1d61d9ef41747c0e65d1b2e3ce0daaf8
describe
'8102' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABWA' 'sip-files00089thm.jpg'
e311689ea21a45a2d172a3196c2e4ce9
6b3fa6cbc10caf5e46c5a96ca3602bb69855eeeb
describe
'432815' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABWB' 'sip-files00090.jp2'
e9fcd43aad5b5c6d6c64c3c3aef9c49b
b8e4d2ff69cb72d78128fbd9200731b5e0890790
describe
'107033' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABWC' 'sip-files00090.jpg'
c08b4793fff98888d79e5d1a1aafe770
be509cd4de4ab30c96859c196ef86cdb79474a58
describe
'39306' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABWD' 'sip-files00090.pro'
b23377727841a77d170f85c5f3ff06de
929158cb557c45a5599d69f918faf4aa90d356e6
describe
'33409' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABWE' 'sip-files00090.QC.jpg'
e2bc20b0049393b325b0ca38d1fe4baa
78e21782dfa45defae3b307e3ee14657dbb03dec
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABWF' 'sip-files00090.tif'
dad7a423deba98f430303f67198b86ec
07a479ce810257a852bb5a2307aef59e8e50dd3e
describe
'1554' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABWG' 'sip-files00090.txt'
5b80918593f33eb284dce4aae7036495
011486bd6b8e336b18a55e950c97ef8832a84f7e
describe
'8283' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABWH' 'sip-files00090thm.jpg'
610db09686db5651492db89ff5fffc5f
f11f3c2d80eec2206269a1d972306f6239c8a243
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABWI' 'sip-files00091.jp2'
d80215e71558c265f6a10f31c8990289
cbdb29b866a69163ed9631b055b276cd0f447a2b
describe
'123765' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABWJ' 'sip-files00091.jpg'
61da7935350c317ed0a9c02880c7341a
3cb092cfab3f2f1d7de5af4dbaabcfbc1434d49b
describe
'29073' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABWK' 'sip-files00091.QC.jpg'
dbf2cdbb02220446377395c6264cda14
905dc999fc46e18ded16c3300ee615a96ed887d9
describe
'3473004' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABWL' 'sip-files00091.tif'
d59c656011d3afefe1116999ad55d4ec
ef4abda088f11ed353c2e8c733c74adb81a6e543
describe
'6915' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABWM' 'sip-files00091thm.jpg'
bf6a7d422bab42b35d1a8e6305bd9393
752730a9a139ac91bfd9dedbfb7f7803bd8f2be7
describe
'144406' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABWN' 'sip-files00092.jp2'
2b98db58afb562b048e68f56cc9e25f0
7fd8f1f57b764c22f0fb711d3081f8bf7f9d129d
describe
'9003' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABWO' 'sip-files00092.jpg'
ec4d628c7c92b9ea760b1845b6e72a1c
c4a3447f90311a1f74b7ed72500a6e95866e04ac
describe
'2547' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABWP' 'sip-files00092.QC.jpg'
b0c18f0c85b4623048539faf213e2cd9
2f2c12b9e39e8edd782c199ef6c501c077616827
describe
'3471120' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABWQ' 'sip-files00092.tif'
d8c060cbe6474755d79ae6456881246d
3e47b4cbb0a7558c9de27f869efb8d931deee481
describe
'879' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABWR' 'sip-files00092thm.jpg'
aef5efb358867e87330727e228b926c3
1175332e04274f99d7d8ccb8b81038ecf883dffa
describe
'433013' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABWS' 'sip-files00093.jp2'
81add4a4c06152a10e677def9d10f1cb
426b89c6fe5304a862b439faf5b0f4b69becfca2
describe
'100941' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABWT' 'sip-files00093.jpg'
30fb606ea79572b2c9d8675d1812cdf0
e5ae7d29bd7bf8d76e56295cade5ddebda8e3c30
describe
'36605' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABWU' 'sip-files00093.pro'
9c5b2da1dea25428d4b6ba73a7dbbdcb
0f3582afd02bc905869b3672e4d4318e4f998a4b
describe
'31558' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABWV' 'sip-files00093.QC.jpg'
d13b75c849c8d1b3d9229e05746604c6
9eaae475d2a2e8e31e0fa7485492bd54ed4064d3
describe
'3473412' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABWW' 'sip-files00093.tif'
f1f9ee5dd774369e8510371c2bbc04b7
96f90232e786865aa7b03ef1534881b05e3b258f
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABWX' 'sip-files00093.txt'
302091783a4b025e68b5d80fd29fc7d8
2737008268e6388544ab2b2532bf2bfeece012e2
describe
'7848' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABWY' 'sip-files00093thm.jpg'
016df04be65b1d4dff83b8c9e8f79ed2
9fd89ec68cbcc24b95d9bb054659ba85888af2b8
describe
'433094' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABWZ' 'sip-files00094.jp2'
fb569895913107cf38f5524528f93c1b
427d5d7358b798f3e7debaa308d668894ab55ba5
describe
'103097' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABXA' 'sip-files00094.jpg'
de86fd88852b22e3301b3fb56617000d
8805e30c048e5199e9ffb7024933c3edf72c9611
describe
'38103' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABXB' 'sip-files00094.pro'
ebe120a72739d7fce96c866f792e7a31
eb035468dd266307e288adbf10eeb9e6cd16ef1a
describe
'32311' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABXC' 'sip-files00094.QC.jpg'
5db8f503f60c4c2b3bf4beda1f2389a1
9161ab131139481c96f92b85115e6b42901f7690
describe
'3473512' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABXD' 'sip-files00094.tif'
4ba0d47c556d64f089173a1a68716adf
a43218b88da0f39196ba52ad16d2e6026dfa7912
describe
'1509' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABXE' 'sip-files00094.txt'
a1a5883be17e37b579e5c62652ebcf78
5206c106018857c1dda2cd0fdc97ad4d03b72cad
describe
'8039' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABXF' 'sip-files00094thm.jpg'
6edbcbd8369817492d79ac8b05ed7a64
8a03a1483d847fe1f025d51a0863fb6b0a61be7c
'2011-11-08T01:19:53-05:00'
describe
'432793' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABXG' 'sip-files00095.jp2'
925b09f589be45cc5e5a2975db01591e
ccc3656df031c96c10944d78fd42ffa2f7db16a8
describe
'116087' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABXH' 'sip-files00095.jpg'
2b62ea0aa9982228aa5b7af59c6d8d82
87f82fd5c9b8cdd9d98cc64764f3ee19e52099ea
describe
'19823' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABXI' 'sip-files00095.pro'
1506fa1bfc90026af52eb7435c68bbbd
bebb4062e165aa719e4a726b0f54e87d23e8bc8c
describe
'32256' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABXJ' 'sip-files00095.QC.jpg'
41e453ce7d20c961795b854f5d94048d
c5bf4e734e69c92c50b664257b3d41a678a72ee2
describe
'3471288' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABXK' 'sip-files00095.tif'
58a3313f7db7bbeb245a1360d9610ae0
661370404610022cd43d748d2fc66fb7fb321ca7
describe
'849' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABXL' 'sip-files00095.txt'
96fff24212c4d36400527d6b2b3635c7
7c21003af1f88943a315ac580535d3f52c265576
describe
'7948' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABXM' 'sip-files00095thm.jpg'
201cc3b44562f588967ff8931c96262e
31b0ed65d7f441118cc6e5b03eecff525ee81a46
describe
'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABXN' 'sip-files00096.jp2'
8a087f2e53697865e65ca250d70fb7ba
dfefeea217d32a41d3b053658b4d544c9279fb75
describe
'102365' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABXO' 'sip-files00096.jpg'
6dfc0cdbfc36c833aa7265f3ccefa1e3
a361a83a28d883913770bbb85fb9590a51c1efb2
describe
'43557' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABXP' 'sip-files00096.pro'
3512e11ff9a937b664effd6e8470199d
4f7a3374c9cfedc1ace8e1cc76b7dd8370ce4205
describe
'32610' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABXQ' 'sip-files00096.QC.jpg'
f5d767b2d31abe6f9e8c714f58b1e5a8
602eb062d8f602dbf954cb42d2a67cec98379a5d
describe
'3471168' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABXR' 'sip-files00096.tif'
f0165fe84196df1eab5ee57cf78dbff8
1532f8b563ee62189370a0e36b05b0606b6213ce
describe
'1813' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABXS' 'sip-files00096.txt'
17eb7ec7408507021116e0b7bf18581d
2602a153b07fed2e109c1e5330ee7e326eb43d6d
describe
'7711' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABXT' 'sip-files00096thm.jpg'
568f439cbb86ea2837b00aff7ac98275
55682ead15a1084a463d99c3d21bc24c2bff2355
describe
'388779' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABXU' 'sip-files00097.jp2'
adc2fb4b45f4f41ab456b4df0b7bbf46
0ce134ff20307a47983e4601cade06c0d2f8618f
describe
'40633' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABXV' 'sip-files00097.jpg'
950b345caec4f74d9f492d76d95a2594
31e1adfb6e4148eea50e65423501ef8e8f603396
describe
'12833' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABXW' 'sip-files00097.pro'
bd2247c014426cb043703a0ac1cbdefa
aadd4d609062bea801468c830450973e3abf1fac
describe
'12701' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABXX' 'sip-files00097.QC.jpg'
91f1c2229e2db938c9c64286efa409fb
4e54578a1657dceb181a7a27042c60d778e7979e
describe
'3471900' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABXY' 'sip-files00097.tif'
759cd5caaad84a6211da62abd7f1d46b
ab93fefca6de964f8e43d9c79627744798759dc6
describe
'597' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABXZ' 'sip-files00097.txt'
0b51f0862b2fb730b35eb422f5648dca
5d269320d2cf4c3f9c0068ee9b4592d58527057e
describe
'3335' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABYA' 'sip-files00097thm.jpg'
b523f5c58e4f22cd58acf0d20ed421c4
f602b088c8d8dcd9a1f39c1118261ad6759f4613
describe
'490607' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABYB' 'sip-files00098.jp2'
4547c45a3f5358e089ffe62115e2ced3
19b5bbb55a1bedc4638213884105c2ea14d2be72
describe
'26937' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABYC' 'sip-files00098.jpg'
32f417cca3ac5569dd25812c28f05546
163e4b2eff9d22abb2537eca0ca91d0c2473474c
describe
'7471' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABYD' 'sip-files00098.QC.jpg'
c08b6ab7d5cca0b8046ec3e4a8ee3062
96be906498e4325abee184ec965e1363087a0aa2
describe
'11791276' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABYE' 'sip-files00098.tif'
0807723bbbed7d6ae314155487daf589
4c8924fde7f3b927f80d4f0312b3fed10916251e
describe
'2582' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABYF' 'sip-files00098thm.jpg'
e03f1e4856ce429f8577799058764882
28cf2b958b1e155d521fd0ab955451349ec261c7
describe
'509036' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABYG' 'sip-files00099.jp2'
bcd0f44d862eb1aee022756be340cb23
8683387a941890ad26c1e2aa277c12aefe55bb53
describe
'244551' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABYH' 'sip-files00099.jpg'
23e652dca14424c9cce5e20e10778081
401107bb5e924a432b18aa582b6ee96541a7e187
describe
'49613' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABYI' 'sip-files00099.QC.jpg'
090e052e26b8a896b6e7a72aa9cd205f
f24d0e9269ca4a18bc606f9be1e7021a2608b791
describe
'12236000' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABYJ' 'sip-files00099.tif'
edbc95a77940f003980c8bfc4bcf7b65
64f3f84a5977b4070c92d9f99b78e35e1a9279b8
describe
'10004' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABYK' 'sip-files00099thm.jpg'
a19e928d5fc99a16c4cae8756b3f2fbb
8e7726a8a07083678a18c9d4dc409c5981980776
describe
'46808' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABYL' 'sip-files00100.jp2'
2148c85012b6f9c7837950ba51320128
f501a960b58c2b0d81f98c369de4b6f45983f2cc
describe
'15217' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABYM' 'sip-files00100.jpg'
401824828dca45f10836271b18a3ac30
76c32d250f06b16f161db72d403726d45de466a9
describe
'213' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABYN' 'sip-files00100.pro'
c0c3b1937f400f925ef010c92dc6f844
38eb81907ea4ca448abe63629547c48b7aaec5ec
describe
'4018' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABYO' 'sip-files00100.QC.jpg'
9f9dce9b5352b4b0e2d7ba517a33fe84
91df22bc785a99d5a88c9d21bde5c4ecbb279ea6
describe
'1139908' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABYP' 'sip-files00100.tif'
992978dd7609d11db42aaa91062b6ee1
fc3c91553448ee6341e41353a2ec5e23573961d2
describe
'3' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABYQ' 'sip-files00100.txt'
bc949ea893a9384070c31f083ccefd26
cbb8391cb65c20e2c05a2f29211e55c49939c3db
describe
'1575' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABYR' 'sip-files00100thm.jpg'
d9562a992fe2cb004a4816628be94ab8
63afa4bfaf602194d98b7758969af3ed102739c9
describe
'136' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABYS' 'sip-filesprocessing.instr'
f1751d6550a4e7cf1a747fb5425734a9
7f552cabf2e646d226d07ae4dc177345e5b33b83
describe
'159874' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABYT' 'sip-filesUF00083405_00001.mets'
36fb2de756160ffdf1222c5355961335
abd04defbf9285f7e50fd65a609595c0fbcd752d
describe
TargetNamespace.1: Expecting namespace 'http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/digital/metadata/ufdc2/', but the target namespace of the schema document is 'http://digital.uflib.ufl.edu/metadata/ufdc2/'.
'2013-12-16T15:39:14-05:00' 'mixed'
xml resolution
http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/digital/metadata/ufdc2/ufdc2.xsdhttp://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema
BROKEN_LINK http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/digital/metadata/ufdc2/ufdc2.xsd
http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema
The element type "div" must be terminated by the matching end-tag "
".
TargetNamespace.1: Expecting namespace 'http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/digital/metadata/ufdc2/', but the target namespace of the schema document is 'http://digital.uflib.ufl.edu/metadata/ufdc2/'.
TargetNamespace.1: Expecting namespace 'http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/digital/metadata/ufdc2/', but the target namespace of the schema document is 'http://digital.uflib.ufl.edu/metadata/ufdc2/'.
'207153' 'info:fdaE20080808_AAAAELfileF20080809_AAABYW' 'sip-filesUF00083405_00001.xml'
c1c91bc0baa439ca51d169209653076a
65717550fff44ef77f3e9ff6db9589f9d026b310
describe
'2013-12-16T15:39:13-05:00'
xml resolution



The Baldwin Library

University | |
RMB sik
Florida |



THE BOYS OF 1745

AT THE CAPTURE OF LOUISBOURG




THE
“ Stories of American History ”

Series.

By JAMES OTIS,
Author of “Toby Tyler,” “ Jenny Wren’s Boarding House,”
etc. Each story complete in one volume; with 17 original

illustrations by 1.. J. Bridgman.
Small 12mo, neatly bound in extra cloth, 75 cents each.

i. When Dewey Came to Manila.
2. Off Santiago with Sampson.

Two new volumes on the recent Spanish-American -
War, in the author’s deservedly popular “ Stories of
American History ” Series.

3. When Israel Putnam Served the King.

4, The Signal Boys of 775: A Tale of the Sieg
of Boston. ;

5. Under the Liberty Tiree: A Story of the
Boston Massacre.

6. The Boys of 1745 at the Capture of Louisburg.
7. An Island Refuge: Casco Bay in 1676.
8. Neal the Miller: A Son of Liberty.

9. Ezra Jordan’s Escape from the Massacre at
Fort Loyall.

Dana Estes & Co., Publishers, Boston.







THE BOYS OF 1745

AT THE

CAPTURE OF LOUISBOURG

BY
JAMES OTIS
AUTHOR OF “ToBy TYLER,” “THE Boys’ REVOLT,” “JENNY WREN’S

BoARDING-HOUSE,” “JERRY’S FAMILY,” Evrc.



Eellustraten

BOSTON
DANA ESTES & COMPANY
PUBLISHERS
Copyright, 1895,
By Esres anp LAuRIAT
All rights reserved

Colonial [ress :
C. H. Simonds & Co., Boston, Mass., U.S.A.
Electrotyped by Geo. C. Seott & Sons
CONTENTS.



PAGE
PREFACE : 7 : . . . . : ae . - 7
CuaPreR I. VOLUNTEER SOLDIERS : . ; . : . I
CHAPTER II. AN UNEXPECTED VISITOR : . : : . 27
CuHaprer III A CHANCE SHOT . : . - : . . 38
Cuapter IV. A CONFESSION . : : . . . . » 55
CHaprer .V. A NiGHT ATTACK. : . * ; . . 68

CHAPTER VI. AN APPEAL . 4 7 7 i 7 : . 80.

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.



DESTROYING SrorES. . . . . . . « Frontispiece

PAGE
Major STORER RECEIVES THE RECRUITS : . . : . 14
PHIL GUARDING DIck . : . 7 . : : : ; 21

«TWICE DID COLONEL VAUGHAN CALL HIM INTO THE CABIN” 24

Dicx’s Visir. ; : : : . . : . : . 31
“Nor A MAN COULD BE SEEN” . . . : . . : 39
“Vou BrRiInG BRAVE NEws” . . . . . . . . 43
COLONEL VAUGHAN Hir. : . : . ; . . : 49
“KEEP THE FLAMES Down” . . : : : : . : 51
«Tr was You WHo TRIED TO SHOOT COLONEL VAUGHAN” . 59
“So rr was You” . : . : ; ; : : : ; 63
“He’LL BE HANGED” ©... ee
PHIL Is WOUNDED . : : : : . : . : . 73
“Dick was Bent, LIKE AN OLD MAN”. : : : ; 83
“Tur SENTINEL Stoop IRRESOLUTELY” — . : : . : 87

“Tue Town Was ABLAZE” . . : . . : : . gt





THE BOYS OF 1745

AT THE CAPTURE OF LOUISBOURG.

CHAPTER I.

VOLUNTEER SOLDIERS.

ROM the middle of February until the 24th of

March (on the day when the fleet of ninety trans-
ports and thirteen: vessels of war sailed from Nantasket
Roads, in Boston Harbour, bound on an expedition of
war to Nova Scotia), the town of Portsmouth, in the
colony of New Hampshire, was in a ferment of excite-
ment.

That the colonies were sufficiently strong to assist the
mother country in war surprised the thoughtless to the
verge of bewilderment, and many of the better-informed
citizens gravely questioned whether it was not a fool-
hardy piece of bravado to make an attack upon a place so
strongly fortified as was the French port of Louisbourg
in Nova Scotia.

Groups of people might have been seen conversing on
the streets at all hours of the day, and even late in the
evening, without fear of reprimand from those in author-

It
12 THE BOYS OF 1745,

ity, and it was an unusual occurrence when men or boys
passed each other without at least referring to the daring
campaign about to be begun by the colonies of Massa-
chusetts, Connecticut and New Hampshire.

Therefore it was that when Philip Towle and Richard
Sanbourne met in front of Master Leavitt’s store on a
certain morning in March, instead of discussing the possi-
bility of trapping musquash or mink before the ice had
left the stream, they spoke of the proposed expedition,
and Philip startled his companion not a little by announc-
ing, boldly, —

«‘T rowed across to Master Pepperrell’s last evening.”

“ Master Pepperrell? I should think you might call
him general, since he has been commissioned by the
Governors of three colonies.”

“Then it was to General Pepperrell’s that I went,” |
Philip replied, with a smile.

«What had you to find there?”

“T wanted to see Major John Storer, who is seeking
recruits.”

“Have you taken it into your head to go to war, Phil
Towle?”

«Why not ?. I was sixteen years old last January, and
already have arms as the law requires. As for the
uniform, I can do without one, or get mother to change
these clothes over. Sam Lowrey has already signed the
rolls, and doesn’t intend to trouble himself about a
soldier’s coat.”

“ But what made you think of such a thing?”


VOLUNTEER SOLDIERS. 13

« The need of money, Dick. You know how hard it is
to earn as much as may be needed for taxes, and the furs
I have taken this season won’t sell for enough to pay
them. Mother does all she can, and a hard time she has
of it, poor thing, since father was killed.”

«Tt is not much you can earn as a soldier. I am told
that the wages are only twenty-five shillings a month,
which means but fourteen sterling,—not quite a six-
pence a day.”

“Tt will be better than nothing; and there should be
prize-money, so Major Storer says. Even without it, two
months’ pay would be a great aid to mother just now.”

“Then you have decided ?”

« Yes, it amounts to that; for unless something happens
I shall enlist this evening.”

«And the major told you there would be prize-money:
for the soldiers?”

“He said there should be, in case the town was cap-
tured.”

“I suppose the soldiers will be allowed to loot it?”
Dick said, thoughtfully.

“Tt is usually considered their privilege, I am told.”

“Phil, I have a mind to go with you.”

“T wish you might, but there is no necessity in your
case, as in mine.” ,

«That makes no difference. I don’t believe father
would object, particularly after I tell him about the prize-
money.” oe,

Philip made no reply. He did not wish to influence


ig . LHE BOYS OF 1745.

his companion in any way, much as he would be pleased
to have him for a comrade. To him, the enlistment was
a means by which he might assist his widowed mother,
while Dick had no such inducement; his father was
believed to be blest with a goodly share of the world’s
goods, having been called a “miser” by more than one











reputable citizen, therefore it seemed as if his son might
well keep out of danger, unless his patriotism was at
boiling point, which was not at all probable.

With Phil, enlistment appeared to be the only way by
which he could earn the money his mother needed; he
did not choose to become a soldier because of a love for
VOLUNTEER SOLDIERS. 15

glory, or the-thought that his country needed him. An
invasion of Nova Scotia, whose inhabitants had never
done any wrong to the colony of New Hampshire, was a
matter which failed to arouse his enthusiasm.

Neither was Dick enthusiastic over the assault upon
the fortified town, save as it might give him booty; and
_ where anything of value was concerned, he could be
almost as “close-fisted”’ as his father.

When these two boys presented themselves as recruits
that evening, Major Storer did not question their
motives, but received them as gladly as he would have
received any other able-bodied candidates for military
honours who might be between the prescribed ages of
“sixteen and sixty.”

After having been accepted as volunteer soldiers, whose
services were to be paid for by the colony, the new
recruits were allowed to spend the greater portion of their
time as best pleased them. There was no question of
living in barracks, because none were provided by the
Government ; it was necessary to spend two hours each
day in drill, and then the embryo heroes were at liberty to
go where they wished, save on four especial occasions,
when Parson Moody preached even longer sermons than
usual, to the supposed improvement of their military edu-
cation, as well as the salvation of their souls.

_ Dick never lost sight of the idea that it might be pos-
sible for him to suddenly bécome rich, in case the town
was captured and sacked ;. but Phil’s mind was constantly
dwelling upon the coming separation from his mother.
16 THE BOYS OF 1746.

There was never a fellow in Portsmouth who: couid truth-
fully have called him a “sissy;’’ but he had not been
absent from home a single night since he was able to re-
member, and it was not pleasant to think of the time
when it would be impossible to kiss his mother good-night.

The day of parting came all too soon, and on the morn-
ing of the twentieth of March, with thirty others of his
company, among whom was Dick Sanbourne, he went on
board the twelve-gun sloop “ Vigilant,” to be carried to
Nantasket Roads, the rendezvous of the squadron.

This particular squad thought they were very fortunate
in being drafted to one of the war-vessels, instead of
being quartered on board an over-crowded transport, and
the majority of them were in the highest spirits, believing
it would be but a comparatively short time before they
returned, crowned with wreaths of victory. Perhaps they
did not count on coming back wearing veritable wreaths,
but they certainly expected to be greeted as conquerors.

Phil was far from being in a jolly mood. He had
parted with his mother shortly before daybreak, and the
tears were not yet dried on his cheeks when the sloop’s
mooring-lines were cast off.

It was but a short journey to the rendezvous, thanks to
the favouring breeze, and the ocean did not treat them
roughly, therefore the amateur soldiers were in good
bodily condition when they arrived, and Phil found an
antidote for homesickness in the stirring and wonderful
scenes around him.

The entire fleet lay at anchor in the Roads, and it was
VOLUNTEER SOLDIERS. 17

sucha spectacle as the soldiers from Portsmouth had never
witnessed before.

A hundred and three vessels, thirteen of them armed,
with red-coated men on every deck, and from the mast-
head of the frigate ‘“ Massachusetts” floating the flag
which bore the motto, “i desperandum. Christo
duce,’ which had been suggested by Parson George
Whitefield.

One day was allowed the recruits for sight-seeing, when
Phil and Dick visited Boston for the first time, and then
came the departure, when there was such an accompani-

”

ment of noisy enthusiasm that Phil had no opportunity to
indulge in tears. Besides, if he had felt like crying he
would have forced the tears back at whatever pang, for he
was a soldier, and as such should be too manly to whimper
like a baby. .

Three hours later a great change came over the red-
coated portion of the “Vigilant’s .

et

crew. The ocean was
no longer in a placid mood; the wind blew with more
violence than seemed necessary, and between decks lay
twenty-four of the thirty soldiers fast in the clutches of
the malady of the sea.

Phil felt confident he was beset with an illness from
which he would never recover, and Dick, who shared his
bunk, said, mournfully, —

“If there were forty towns to be sacked, and I had
known we would be delivered up to such an attack as this,
not even nites Pepperrell himself could have induced
me to come.’
18 THE BOYS OF 1748.

“Tt is terrible!’ Phil moaned, thinking of his mother
and home.

«We have been cheated!” and Dick endeavoured to as-
sume a sitting posture, but desisted after striking his head
painfully hard against the deck-timbers. “Is this the
pleasure excursion that was pictured ? Major Storer said
men ought to pay for such a privilege, instead of expect-
ing to be paid! I wonder how much he thinks would be
a fair price for me to pay for my enjoyment just now?”

Phil made no reply. Hewas conscious only of the sen-
sations of faintness and nausea, and did not dare to speak.

A. sailor, who came below on some errand, announced
that a northeast storm had sprung up, and the two boys
were quite convinced it could be nothing less than a
hurricane.

Whether it was a storm or hurricane, the foul weather
continued until the “Vigilant” entered the harbour of
Canseau, the fifth day of April, and Phil and Dick crept
on deck, looking like boys who had just arisen from a
fever.

And it was not surprising that they did look haggard
and worn. During the entire passage neither had been
able to partake of anything more nourishing than tea or
small fragments of ship’s bread; but hunger or weakness
was alike forgotten in the happy relief of being able to
walk about.

Dick’s countenance fell as he saw the small village of
Canseau, which the French lately took from the English,
but which had changed masters once more when the fleet
arrived.
VOLUNTEER SOLDIERS. 19

«Tf Louisbourg looks anything like this settlement, we
shan’t be benefited by looting the town,” he said, ruefully.
“Except fish, there is nothing here worth carrying away.
We were fools for coming.”

«That may be true in your case, but not in mine,’ Phil
replied, with a feeble attempt at a smile. “Each night I
have said to myself that another sixpence has been earned
for mother, and if the money could not be gotten in any
other way, I would endure the suffering over again for her
sake.”

« Sixpences don’t count with me,” Dick replied, loftily.
“Let's goon shore; I want to feel the solid earth under
my feet once more.”

« Will it be allowed?’

«Who is here to stop us?”

“ Major Storer should give us permission first.”

“JT don’t intend to ask him. When there is any fight-
gin to be done he can come to me about it; but he has no
authority while we are lying here idle.”

Phil's idea of a soldier’s duty was different, and he re-
fused to leave the sloop, ardently though he desired to
be on shore. .

A boat lay at the gangway; there was no guard near at
hand, and Richard Sanbourne, the son of his father, took
possession of her as boldly as if he was in sole command
of the expedition.

By a singular fortune no one in authority observed Dick
when he left the sloop; but the boat was soon missed, and
in a short time not only the captain, but Lieutenant-
20 THE BOYS OF 17485.

Colonel William Vaughan, of the New Hampshire forces,
who chanced to be on board at the time, knew what had
been done by a private soldier.

The officer was particularly angry because sucha breach
of discipline had been committed by one of his own com-
mand, and a squad of men were sent at once in search of
Dick.

Phil was not called upon to aid in capturing the auda-
cious soldier, and congratulated himself on being spared
the disagreeable duty of assisting in making a prisoner
of his friend; but before nightfall he found himself in a
much more unpleasant position than if he had been de-
tailed as one of the searchers.

Dick was on board again within an hour from the time
he had left so unceremoniously, and conducted at once
to the cabin, where he remained ten or fifteen minutes.
Then he was escorted on deck by two soldiers, who
guarded him closely until word had been brought to Phil
that he was to stand watch over the prisoner until further
orders.

For an instant there was a wild idea in the boy’s mind
of refusing to do such duty; but, fortunately, he realized
that by such a course he would not be aiding his friend,
and would get himself into very serious difficulties.

«There is no need of remaining below,” the sergeant
said, as he led the way forward. ‘ You can keep him here
without trouble, and as soon as we get some handcuffs
from the frigate you will be relieved. The orders are to
shoot him if he attempts to escape, so see to it that your
gun is loaded and ready for use.”













VOLUNTEER SOLDIERS. 23

Dick had not spoken since he came from the cabin, but
when he was left comparatively alone with Phil, he said in
a low, angry tone, — .

“Tf these fellows think they can treat me in this
manner because I am to be paid a sixpence a day, they ’ll
soon discover their mistake.”

«But you are a soldier, Dick, and as such must obey
orders, one of which is not to absent yourself from
quarters without permission.”

“Does Bill Vaughan fancy he can make me come at his
beck and call? It isn’t six months since he wanted to
borrow money of my father, and here he is trying to make
out I’m his prisoner!”

“But you ave his prisoner, and he has the power to
make matters very uncomfortable for you, Dick, being an
officer of such high rank. Don’t rage, when it will only
end in injury to yourself; but beg pardon for what has
been done, and most likely nothing more will come of your
little excursion.”

“You must think I’m a fool to beg Bill Vaughan’s
pardon!”

“T shall surely think you one if you don’t.”

Dick did not take kindly to such advice, and moved a
few paces from his friend, remaining silent several mo-
ments, when he turned suddenly as he said, —

“Of course you don’t count on carrying out the orders
given by the sergeant.”

«What else can I do?”

«Turn your back when I want to slip over the bow.”
24 THE BOYS OF 1748.

“You would n’t think of trying to swim ashore?”

«Why not?”

“The gravest reason is, that the harbour is filled with
ice, and you would be chilled to the bone before swimming
a dozen strokes. Then, again, you might be out of the
frying-pan into the fire ashore, where it would be an easy
matter to recapture you.”



“I’m not so certain about that. Say, Phil, it will be
dark in half an hour. When I say the word will you look
aft five minutes or so?”

“JT don’t dare to disobey orders, Dick.”

“You’re a sneak, that’s what you are! I shall go
over, whether you help me or not, and once we’re back in
Portsmouth, Ill have a long score to settle with you!”
VOLUNTEER SOLDIERS. 25

Phil was too deeply hurt to make any reply, and Dick
leaned over the rail, as if no longer desirous of talking.

The sentinel felt quite certain his friend would not
attempt to carry into execution the threat made, and
walked slowly to and fro, wishing most earnestly that some
other soldier had been selected for the disagreeable duty.

The moments passed until the sun disappeared in the
western sky; the gloom of evening hung heavily over the
fleet, shutting out from view the shore, although so close
at hand, and Phil turned to reason with the prisoner just
as the latter leaped into the icy water.

For an instant the boy was too much alarmed and
surprised to make the least outcry. Even though his
own life had depended upon the act, he could not have
discharged a weapon at Dick.

While one might have counted twenty he remained
silent and motionless, and then cried at the full strength
of his lungs, — ,

“Man overboard! Man overboard!”

A dozen sailors and soldiers were by his side almost as
soon as the words had been uttered, but even then nothing
could be seen of the escaping prisoner.

Two hours later the boats returned from searching the
harbour and shore, and the report was that the labour had
been in vain,

“He must have sunk almost as soon as he struck the
icy water, sir,’ the sergeant reported to the captain. “It
don’t stand to reason a boy could swim a dozen yards
while it is so cold.”
26 THE BOYS OF 1746.

Next morning, on the books of the company was the
following entry:

“April 5th, 1745. Richard Sanbourne, while under
guard for disobedience of orders, leaped overboard, and
was drowned.”
CHAPTER II.
AN UNEXPECTED VISITOR.

HIL’S grief because of the untimely fate of Dick

Sanbourne was most intense. He reproached him-

self with being responsible for the sad affair, although he
could not explain why he was at fault.

Dick’s chances for escape would not have been _bet-
tered had the sentinel offered him every assistance in his
power, while there could be no question but that matters
might have been readily adjusted had the prisoner fol-
lowed his friend’s advice.

The young recruit had been guilty of insubordination ;
but on this expedition that was not a very serious matter,
for the officers and men were friends or acquaintances, and
there was no very decided attempt to exact strict military
obedience.

Phil’s comrades, on learning that he reproached him-
self as having contributed in some degree to his friend’s
probable death, used every effort to disabuse his mind of
such an idea, and the result was that he soon found him-
self the object of so much attention as to cause positive
embarrassment. Twice did Colonel Vaughan call him into
the cabin of the sloop to consider the matter carefully,
and on each occasion did his best to convince the young

27
28 THE BOVS OF 1745.

soldier that he was in no wise responsible for the deplor-
able event ; but without success.

On the following Sunday Phil asked permission to
attend the services held by Parson Moody, and listened
to the unusually long sermon intently, although there was
much which would ordinarily have distracted his atten-
tion. Save for the words of the clergyman, the Sabbath
presented nothing of that sanctity so marked at home;
on every hand were troops being drilled, workmen mov-
ing rapidly to and fro, or little knots of men discussing
secular matters with so much vehemence as to almost
drown the preacher’s trumpet-like tones.

To Phil’s disappointment, the good man made no ref-
erence to anything which might give’ his troubled heart
relief. The text, «Thy people shall be willing in the day

’

of Thy power,” was used with reference to the probable
capture of the fortified town, and the proposed destruc-
tion of such places of worship as did not meet with
Parson Moody’s approbation.

He returned to his quarters more depressed than ever,
and the three weeks of inactivity which elapsed before
the expedition could proceed, because of the ice which yet
blocked the entrance to the harbour of Louisbourg, only
aided in increasing his melancholy. 2

Then came the day when anticipations of immediate
battle drove from his mind all thoughts not connected
with a soldier's duties. The fleet set sail for Gabarus
Bay, and, twenty-four hours later, the troups were dis-
embarked before the town which was to be captured.
AN UNEXPECTED VISITOR. 29

It had not been possible to surprise the enemy, there-
fore those who had anticipated a sudden victory were
forced to prepare for a regular siege, in which raw
recruits were to try their metal against the strongest
fortifications in the New World, defended by veterans.

There was a slight resistance to the landing; but Phil
saw nothing of this first violence. The “ Vigilant’ had
not yet arrived inside the bay when it occurred, and, owing ©
to the wind, the rattle of musketry could not be heard
from her decks.

During the twenty-four hours which followed, Phil was
wretched, both in body and mind. The troops were
stationed near the shore, with no shelter save such as
could be found amid the stunted bushes, and the wind,
damp from its long journey over the sea, seemed as cold
as in winter.

On the morning after the embarkation word was
brought to Phil that Colonel Vaughan wished to speak
with him, and the boy went at once to the small cluster
of fishermen’s shanties where the officers of the expedi-
tion were quartered.

«We are about to make a reconnoissance, lad, and it is
my fancy to have you with me. You will be exposed to
less danger by remaining in the ranks, therefore it is a
request rather than a command.”

“JT shall be very glad to accompany you, sir,” Phil
replied, modestly. “I expected to be confronted by
danger when I enlisted as a soldier.”

“Well said, lad. See to it that you carry. all your
blankets, and return here immediately.”
30 THE BOYS OF 17465.

Phil’s heart was beating violently when he reported for
duty. One glance at the apparently impregnable fortifi-
cations had been sufficient to convince him there would be
plenty of blood spilled before victory could be won by
either party, and he was about to begin his portion of the
struggle.

Four hundred men had been drawn up in line, and
when Colonel Vaughan emerged from the huts, this body
of troops was marched directly toward the hills which
overlooked the town.

Phil was not burdened with arduous duties. He re-
mained near the commander, and from time to time per-
formed certain trifling services. It appeared very much as
if the colonel had attached the boy to his staff as an act
of kindness, rather than from the idea that he could be
of especial benefit. The troops marched as near the town
as was deemed safe, and there were ordered to salute the
enemy with three cheers, rather an odd proceeding, as
Phil thought. Then, without further demonstrations, the
command made a défour behind the hills in the rear of
Grand Battery, which was situated in such a position as to
command the entrance to the harbour, near “ extensive
magazines of naval stores.”

The men understood why they had been called out,
when orders were given to destroy all the property not
protected by the guns of the battery, and during the
remainder of the day Phil witnessed such deeds as he had
believed could never be enacted. Valuable stores were
given to the flames; buildings sacked of such ammunition
AN UNEXPECTED VISITOR. 31

as could readily be carried away, and then sacrificed, and
a spirit of wanton destruction seemed to have taken pos-
session of all.
It was a picture of war enlivened by no acts of heroism.
Not until an hour after nightfall was the work finished,
and then Colonel Vaughan believed it imprudent to return



x

to the main army, four miles distant, lest he fall into an
ambush.

The soldiers bivouacked near the ruins of the buildings,
where the heat from the glowing embers tempered the
wind to the blanketless men, and, when a portion of the
rations brought with them had been eaten, each one dis-
posed of himself for the night as best suited his fancy.

Sentinels were stationed, as a matter of course, yet
they were not so numerous but that a large body of the
enemy might have approached unobserved; and had the
occupants of the battery made a sortie at any time from
32 THE BOYS OF 1746.

midnight until morning, the surprise must have been
complete. ©

Colonel Vaughan was not lodged more comfortably
than his men. He laid down between two half-burned
timbers, at a point nearest the enemy, and a dozen yards
from him was Phil.

It was a long while before the boy’s eyes closed in .
slumber, and then it seemed as if he had but just fallen
into unconsciousness when a pressure upon his arm
aroused him. .

The fires were burning so low that but little light
illumined the darkness, and Phil felt, rather than saw,
that some one had crawled under his blanket beside
him.

The first thought was that a comrade, less generously
provided with coverings against the cold, was taking
advantage of his belongings, and he settled down for
another nap, regardless of the intruder, when a voice
whispered in his ear, —

«Don’t you know me?”

Phil sprang up in alarm, for he recognized the voice of
Dick, — Dick whom he had firmly believed was dead; but
the intruder pulled him roughly down as he whispered
fiercely, —-

“Keep quiet, or some of the sentinels will see me; I
don’t intend to give Bill Vaughan a chance to make me
prisoner again.”

«But where have you come from? How did you get
here? I thought you—”’
AN UNEXPECTED VISITOR. 33

«Believed I was dead, eh?” And, despite his danger,
Dick gave vent to an audible chuckle.

. «Every one supposed you drowned within a few mo-
ments after leaping into the water.”

«Then every one must be a fool. So long as I kept
well under the surface, I didn’t suffer from the cold. It
was when I crawled out that trouble began. I thought I
should freeze to death ”

« How did you avoid it ?”

“Kept in motion. Ran the best I knew how till I got
rid of the numbness, and you can fancy I didn’t remain
near the shore. About a mile away I struck a small hut
where a fisherman lived, and there I got thawed out. It
cost me two shillings to prevent him from taking me
back, but I would n’t have begrudged twice the amount.”

«But you were then at Canseau, and now we are near
Louisbourg.”

«You seem to have a fairly good idea of affairs, even
though you are serving under such a chuckle-head as Bill
Vaughan. We are near Louisbourg.”

«But how did you get here?”

“The fisherman is a Frenchman. He didn’t care to
remain at Canseau after the English took possession, and
made all haste to reach Louisbourg. By the expenditure
of two shillings more I was allowed to come with him.
The price was much too high, for I did my full share of
work in running the boat, and without my assistance he
never would have arrived.”

«We were told the harbour was blocked with ice.”
34 THE BOYS OF 1745.

“So it was; but we could land almost anywhere from
our dory, and once ashore on this island, I turned French-
man. I have been stationed at the Grand Battery, which
you passed yesterday.”

«Then how does it happen you are here with me.”

“Tl tell you a big secret, Phil, and if you are sharp
you can turn it to your advantage. The battery is to be
abandoned; already the men are marching out. They are
cowards, for half their number could hold it against the
crowd: Bill Vaughan has brought here; but they won’t
listen to me, and to-morrow you people can take posses-
sion.”

“How will it be of benefit to me?”

“Wait until that money-borrowing Vaughan leaves
this place, and then take possession yourself. General
Pepperrell will hear what you have done, and cannot fail
to give a handsome reward, one-half of which you must
turn over tome. That is why I run the risk to pay you
a visit to-night. If you work this matter properly there
will be more in it for us than we could get by sacking
Louisbourg, even though we entered the town in the
front ranks.”

Phil remained silent. He failed to understand the
matter as Dick apparently did. In case the battery was
to be abandoned, he was not the one who should reap the
benefit of the discovery, and just at that moment it seemed
his duty to tell Colonel Vaughan all he had heard.

Dick suspected the thoughts which were in his com-
rade’s mind, and said, threateningly, —
AN UNEXPECTED VISITOR. 35

“Don’t think you can get the credit and all the reward
at the same time. I have put myself in your power, so far
as Bill Vaughan may be able to do me an injury, but
pledge my word that you’ll never live to see Portsmouth
again if you try to play me false.”

“T haven’t any idea of trying to play you or any one
false,” Phil replied, indignantly. “I didn’t ask you to
come with the story of the abandonment of the battery,
and most likely the men will discover what has been done
as soon as daybreak. My getting a reward for reporting
what another could see as well as I is nonsense.”

“It’s sound common sense if you have courage enough
to carry it out properly. Manage to loiter behind when
the troops leave, and then go boldly into the works; I'll
see to it that a messenger is at hand to carry the joyful
tidings, and you can hold the place alone until men are
sent from headquarters to take possession. You will
make your name famous; I shall be revenged on Bill
Vaughan, for of course he will be reprimanded for not
discovering such a valuable piece of news, and both of us
will make money out of the transaction.”

“Look here, Dick,” Phil said, suddenly, as a plan for
changing the subject of the conversation occurred to him;
“do you know what risks you have taken in coming here
with a scheme to make a few shillings?”

“You mean that Vaughan may get hold of me?”

“That is also possible; but it may be a very serious
matter so far as your new friends are concerned. If they
should learn that you have been here, visiting the enemy,
36 THE BOYS OF 1746.

can’t you see what would happen? You would be con-
sidered a spy, and hanged at the shortest notice. This is
war, instead of a pleasure excursion, as we were led to
believe, and when a man or a boy either, for that matter,
is suspected of giving information to the enemy, the end
comes cruelly quick.”

“T haven't given any information,” Dick replied, with
an effort to speak calmly, but his friend understood that
he was thoroughly frightened.

«That is true; but if the French should learn of this
visit, could you persuade them that such was the fact?”

“They've got more sense than the men you are
serving.”

“That would n’t prevent them from dealing in the usual
manner with a spy. As the matter now stands, you are
liable to be arrested and shot by the English for having de-
serted in the face of the enemy, or hung by the French.”

“As you figure it, I might as well consider myself dead
already,” Dick replied, grimly, but his voice trembled per-
peetibly, despite his attempts to render it steady.

“I believe you will soon come to some violent end
unless you take a sharp turn at once. Why not give
yourself up to Colonel Vaughan now? I am certain
everything can be made right, more especially since you
bring such good news, and it will be plain sailing in the
future.”

“Do you think I would let him get hold of me again?”

“You must forget that he is a townsman whom you
have known well, and look upon him only as an officer in
the colonial forces.”
AN UNEXPECTED VISITOR. 37

“T’ll look upon him for just what he is, and nothing
more. It is easy to see that you are trying to curry favour
with the villain, and I may as well go back. Remember
this, Phil Towle, if you do not come into my scheme
for getting a reward out of General Pepperrell, you
are to hold your tongue regarding what I have told you.”

«J don’t know what I ought to do,’ Phil replied, in a
tone of perplexity.

«JT do, and if you try to get the best of me there’ll be
more trouble for you than there is in this whole business
of attempting to capture Louisbourg. Don’t dare so
much as dream of what I have said unless you are will-
ing to do exactly as I direct. J am going now, but it will
be a simple matter to get at you if there is any DG
for so doing.”

Dick began to crawl out of the blankets without rising,
and Phil, paying no attention to the threat, said, implor-
ingly, —

« Don’t run such a risk, Dick! Stay here, and I will do
my best to get you out of the scrape in which you placed
yourself by going on shore without permission.”

“You'll do nothing unless I say the word, remember
that! If you ene the slightest hint to Bill Vaughan of
what I told you—”

Dick did not conclude the threat, probably paledaea it
would be more terrifying if incomplete, and almost before
Phil was aware that he had started, the visitor was lost to
view in the darkness.
CHAPTER IIL.
A CHANCE SHOT.

ft ieaes was no possibility that Philip Towle, private,

in the colonial forces from New Hampshire, would
be able to sleep very much on this night after the destruc-
tion of the enemy’s naval stores.

That which the visitor had told him was sufficient to
drive from his mind all thoughts of everything save the
proper course to be pursued.

It appeared as if his duty as a soldier demanded that
he give the startling information to Colonel Vaughan at
once ; but he was deterred by the thought that it would
also be necessary to explain how he learned the news, in
which case Dick’s position would become more serious
than it already was.

Had it been a secret, the keeping of which might have
involved possible loss of life, he would not have hesitated ;
but it was only a question of taking possession of the bat-
tery a few hours sooner or later, and he finally decided
there could be no harm in allowing matters to remain as
they were.

Never for an instant did he entertain the idea of trying
to gain a reward, as Dick had suggested.

Not once did he close his eyes in sleep, and when the

38




























Se Zi
YY,
: f

Wii fZ;
Ly
A CHANCE SHOT. Al

sun rose he was the first member of the party ready for
the duties of the day.

Eagerly he gazed toward that splendid fortification
known as the Grand Battery instantly it was sufficiently
light to see surrounding objects, and there was certainly
good reason to believe Dick had told nothing more than
the truth.

Not a man could be seen in or about the works, while
on the previous afternoon it had been possible to distin-
guish the sentinels as they paced to and fro.

Colonel Vaughan’s first act after awakening was to send
all the troops, save a dozen men, back to the shore, since
there was apparently nothing more to be done in that
vicinity.

With the small squad the colonel ate breakfast, chat-
ting cheerily with Phil, meanwhile, on indifferent topics,
and not until fully half an hour had elapsed did he show
any inclination to retrace his steps.

It seemed strange to Phil that not a single member of
the party took notice of the fact that the enemy’s senti-
nels could no longer be seen, and in the hope that some
one might note the works more particularly, he asked
several questions concerning them.

“That battery will do us a power of harm before we
succeed in reducing it,’ the colonel replied, without so
much as glancing in the direction Phil most desired. «It
is exceptionally strong, and the loss of life must neces-
sarily be great when we finally assault it, as we shall be
forced to do before the main works can be captured.”
42 THE BOYS OF 17485.

Then Vaughan talked with some of the elder members
of the party as to the route they would take in returning
to the shore, and Phil realized he must speak more plainly
if the evacuation was to be discovered.

“Colonel,” he cried, suddenly, as if his attention had
but just been attracted to the subject, “isn’t it strange
that we can’t see any sentinels this morning? They were
in full view last night.”

This proved sufficient.

All gazed intently at the frowning works, and after
some discussion, the little party moved yet nearer.

“Their flag is no longer flying!” Colonel Vaughan
exclaimed. ‘It does n’t seem possible such a strong post
could be abandoned, and yet it surely has that appear-
ance.”

It was possible there might be in this apparent evac-
uation an ambush planned, and instead of venturing
boldly inside, the colonel hired an Indian from Cape Cod,
who had accompanied the troop as guide, to make an
examination.

Ta less than five minutes after the Indian had crept
through one of the embrasures, the gate was thrown open,
and the small force took possession of the place which it
had been supposed would cost many lives in the taking.

«Can you make your way back to General Pepperrell’s
headquarters ?”” Colonel Vaughan asked Phil, shortly after
they were inside the works.

“JT do not think I should have any difficulty in doing
so, sir.”

A CHANCE SHOT. 45

«Then carry him a message, and I venture to say he
will receive no visitor to-day who brings better news.”’

He wrote hurriedly the following words :

“May it please your honour to be informed that by the
grace of God, and the courage of thirteen men, I entered
the royal battery about nine o’clock, and am waiting for
reénforcement and a flag.”

Phil started off at full speed, giving no heed to the
brambles which tore his clothes and scratched his face as
he pressed through the tangled underbrush. His only
thought was to reach headquarters as soon as possible,
that a sufficient number of men to hold the battery might
be sent before the enemy could discover how needlessly
they had been alarmed.

He arrived in good season, and when admitted to
General Pepperrell’s presence was breathing heavily from
the fatigue of the rapid and painful journey.

“You bring brave news, young sir,” the general said,
in a tone of glad surprise, after reading the brief note.
“T judge you have lost no time on the way.”

“Tt was necessary I should get here quickly, sir, for
men are needed to hold the works.”

“They shall be sent without delay, and here is some-
thing which will keep you in remembrance of this day’s
fortunate happenings.”

The general handed Phil two gold coins, a greater
amount of money than the boy had ever seen at one time
before, and was about to make some further remark
when Colonel Messerve entered, looking thoroughly mys-
tified, as he cried, —
46 THE BOVS OF 1745.

“Four boats loaded with men have left the town,
evidently bound in the direction of the Grand Battery!
Vaughan must be in that vicinity !”

Instantly all was confusion; orders were given hur-
riedly, rapidly executed, and it seemed to Phil he had not
been in camp five minutes when two hundred men were
on the double-quick to reénforce their comrades.

From where he stood, the boy could see Vaughan and
his small troop drawn up in line on the beach to oppose
the intended landing, and he had the satisfaction of watch-
ing the brave fellows hold the enemy in check until those
who had been sent in support arrived.

Colonel Vaughan returned to headquarters after Brig-
adier Waldo and his regiment were in peaceful possession-
of the battery, and Phil presented himself for duty.

“Tt will be a long while, now the city is invested,
before we shall see any more fighting, so set about put-
ting up something which will serve you as a camp. It
has been ordered that all the spare sails in the fleet be
sent ashore, with which to make tents; but I fancy a boy
like you can soon build a better shelter than they will
form. You may report to your captain that you are on
detached duty under me, and after the hut is built, let me
know.” ,

By this means Phil escaped the heavy work of aiding in
the landing of the guns and stores, which was most ar-
duous as well as dangerous, and before nightfall he had
constructed a shanty which would protect him from the
wind, if not the rain.
A CHANCE SHOT. 47

It was built of spruce boughs, with turf laid around the
sides, and was by no means the poorest of the many rude
substitutes for camps to be seen on either side of the
brook running from the hills a couple of miles southwest
of the town.

After the transports had been unladen came the labour
of dragging cannon to the spot selected for the first
battery, on Green Hill, two miles from where the stores
were landed, and this labour was excessive, as Phil had
ample opportunity to learn.

While there was nothing to be done save to make prep-

arations for bombarding the town, it. was not reasonable
that Colonel Vaughan would keep the boy on detached
duty very long, therefore he was forced to do his share of
the fatiguing work.
- During two weeks he aided in dragging the heavy
pieces of ordnance across marshy ground, so soft that it
was necessary to place them on sledges lest they should
sink beyond recovery, and to each of these rude vehicles
two hundred soldiers were harnessed with breast-straps
and rope traces.

More than once did it seem to Phil as if he could no
longer perform his share of the task, so nearly was he
exhausted; but the thought that the gold presented by
General Pepperrell was sufficient in amount to relieve his
mother of her most pressing wants served to animate
him, despite the monotony and brutish nature of the
labour.

Then, when Phil was thoroughly weary with this kind
48 THE BOYS OF 1746.

of a soldier’s life, came the welcome summons to present
himself at headquarters, where he found a squad of men
drawn up preparatory to making a reconnoissance under
the lead of Colonel Vaughan, and he soon learned he was
to accompany the party.

The purpose of the movement was to ascertain the
most advantageous spot at which an assault could be
made.

From the manner in which the leader set about the
work, it could be understood that he hoped something
more might be done than simply surveying the land, for
no man “enjoyed” a battle better than did the Lieutenant
Colonel of the New Hampshire forces, and a skirmish did
not come amiss, to his mind, when nothing more serious
was possible.

Instead of proceeding directly to the spot where Gen-
eral Pepperrell believed artillery could be used to the best
advantage, a long détowr was made, which brought the
squad on the high land north of the city, where was a
heavy growth of timber to screen them from view.

Once in this place, scrutinizing the town he hoped
would soon be captured, Colonel Vaughan gave little
heed to his men, so intent was he in gaining all the
information possible relative to the movements of the
enemy, and the soldiers were allowed to ramble here and
there at will, the only restriction being that they keep
within hailing distance of each other.

Phil and the colonel were in a dense clump of spruce
trees, and the latter was hewing off some of the branches
A CHANCE SHOT. 49

with his sword, in order to gain a better view of the
beleaguered town, when a single report rang out, sharp
and distinct, as a bullet cut the skin on the officer’s face.
For an instant both the colonel and Phil thought the
former was seriously wounded, but when the trifling
nature of the hurt was discovered, anger succeeded fear.
«Whoever discharged that musket intended to kill
me!” Colonel Vaughan exclaimed, sharply. “Hello!
Where are you, men?”
The soldiers, having
heard the report. and fancy-
ing an attack was being
made, were already com-
ing at full speed toward
their commander, and the
words had hardly been
spoken before all the squad
were within the thicket.



“Did any of you dis-
charge a musket just now?” Each denied in turn hav-
ing done anything of the kind, and showed his loaded
gun in proof of the statement.

“Tt isn’t possible one of the enemy can be outside the
city, for this portion of the island has been traversed
many times by our soldiers since we landed,” the officer
said, in a low tone, to Phil. “There’s mischief afoot, and
we must know what it is. You are to stay here with the
men, to make certain they do not leave the place, and I
will do a little reconnoitring on my own account.”
50 THE BOYS OF 1748.

“You surely don’t intend to go alone!” Phil cried, in
alarm.

«“] shall be safer than with companions. Do as I have
bidden, and take good care to keep a sharp watch on all
the men.”

The colonel disappeared’ amid the underbrush: as he
ceased speaking, and Phil tried in vain to fancy who could
have any cause of enmity against so kind an officer.

Just once did his thoughts wander to Dick Sanbourne,
but he dismissed the subject immediately, for he had good
reason to believe that young gentleman was secure behind
the walls of the city.

Colonel Vaughan was absent half an hour,.and when he
returned, the men were ordered back to headquarters,
although the purpose for which they came out had not
been accomplished.

Phil asked no questions relative to what might have
been discovered; but before the march had come to an
end, the colonel said, in a low tone, as if fearful his words .
would be overheard by those in the rear, —

«Do you want to know what I saw a short distance
from where we were standing when that shot was fired?”

“T do, unless you wish to keep it a secret.”

“Not from you, lad; for I expect you will aid me in
solving the mystery. The footprints of: a man were plain
upon the turf, and.I even saw where he rested his gun to
take aim. That wouldn’t have been so very surprising,
since we know perfectly well some one was there, but I
believe it was a member of our own regiment!”










































3
wa

a

aa

to
“i


A CHANCE SHOT. 53

« Why do you think so, sir?” Phil asked, in astonishment.

“Because of the footprints. I could almost swear the
boots which made them came from old Tyson’s shop.
There isn’t a cobbler in the colonies, and it goes without
saying that there are none in France who cuts such a
peculiar sole; the toe is the widest part of it.”

“But who among our men would try to kill you, sir?”

“That is exactly what I propose to find out, if possible.
When we arrive at headquarters you are to go directly to
your shanty, and wait until I come, which will probably
not be ‘ill late in the evening.”

After giving this order the colonel relapsed into a silence
: which was not broken until the command was dismissed
in front of the hut occupied by General Pepperrell.

Phil did as he had been bidden, and there remained,
listening to the roaring of the guns from the advanced
battery, wishing he was at liberty to go where he could
see what execution was being done.

At sunset no word had been received from the colonel,
and the boy built a small. fire in front of the hut with
which to cook the meal that made up his portion of ‘the
day’s rations.

The cannon were still being worked, and from time to
. time squads of men passed him on their way to watch the
gunners. More than one invited Phil to follow, but he
shook his head. The order was to remain in his camp,
and he did not intend to disobey, whatever might be the
attraction at the front.

The evening passed, and yet no word from the colonel.
54 THE BOYS OF 1746.

One by one the men off duty sought the shelter of their
poor apologies for tents, until not a person was to be seen
within Phil’s range of vision.

He piled his camp-fire high with wood, and laid down in
front of it. The earth no longer trembled under the de-
tonations of the cannon; the ‘sighing of the wind could
be heard from among the trees, and the monotonous mur- —
mur of the surf wooed the tired boy to slumber.

Then came a time when he fancied he heard in a dream
his own name called softly, but not until it had been re-
peated several times did he realize that it was a reality,
and not the result of a vision.

Once he understood this fact, he sprang to his feet,
rubbing his eyes to free them from the mist of slumber,
but there was no person to be seen.

«It must have been a dream after all, and yet it sounded
wonderfully distinct,’ he muttered to himself; and then,
observing that the fire was burning low, he began collect-
ing fuel with which to replenish it, when from his hut came
a hoarse whisper :

“Keep the fame down! Can’t you understand that I
don’t want to be seen here?”

Phil’s surprise was so great as to amount almost to be-
wilderment, for he recognized Dick Sanbourne’s voice.

«Come in, can’t you?” the invisible speaker added, in a
tone of irritation. “I don’t propose to lay around here
all night while your wits are wool-gathering.”’

Phil entered the shanty, by no means pleased to meet
his old friend again.
CHAPTER IV.
A CONFESSION.

ICK acted as if he had good cause for complaint
because Phil did not give him a hearty greeting,
and said in an injured tone, —

“You don’t seem very glad to see me!”

“Tam not.”

“You’re getting stuck up because Bill Vaughan has
taken you under his wing; that ’s what’s the matter.”

“JT didn’t know he had ‘taken me under his wing,’ as
you call it. I have tried to do my duty —’

“For which you are to get nearly a sixpence a day, if
the colony can raise money enough to pay the men who
have enlisted,” Dick interrupted, with a sneer.

«Ves, that was the amount agreed upon, and we have
no right to find fault. There has been no change in the
price since the day on which we enlisted, and then it
seemed sufficient.”

«So it-would have been had Storer’s stories turned out
true ; we were to come on a pleasure excursion, and be
paid for it. Instead, we were sent down here to be
killed.”

«There has n’t been any very great slaughter thus far.”

“Wait till the city is assaulted, and then you will see
the blood run. Louisbourg is fortified so strongly that ten

55
56 THE BOYS OF 1746.

times the number of men at Pepperrell’s command couldn’t
force an entrance.”

“T admit there is good reason for you to speak so
positively ; but tell me why you are not behind the walls
now? Did the French suspect you?”

“T never went back to find out. You said so much
about what might be done, I concluded it wasn’t safe.”

«And it would have been very dangerous, I firmly
believe. If suspicion had arisen that you had visited our
men just before the battery was abandoned, it would have
been a short shrift for you.”

“Most likely I should have pulled through all right ; but
Iam willing to confess you frightened me, and I steered
clear of both parties until hunger has driven me here.”

«Where have you been staying ?”’

“ In the woods.”

«You might have been taken by some of our men.”

“Tt’s easy to keep clear of them. I got along all
right while my ammunition held out; but now that is
gone I am on precious short allowance. Instead of ask-
ing so many questions, why not give me something to
eat? I am nearly starved.”

Phil believed, from the visitor's tone, that he was
speaking the truth, and his sympathies were aroused.

The only food he had was a portion of the hasty-
pudding made that evening; but he set it before Dick,
who ate as if he was indeed nearly famished.

“Tf I had known there was a chance you would come,
I’d saved more; but, supposing you safe inside Louis-
A CONFESSION. 57

bourg, the possibility that others might need my rations
never occurred to me. Say, Dick, do you realize that
each day makes your case worse?’

“In what way?” the visitor asked, speaking indistinctly,
because his mouth was so full of pudding.

« After it is known you have been hanging around so
long in the enemy’s service, there will be less sympathy
felt when you ask for pardon.”

“Do you think I’m going to do anything of that kind,
especially to Bill Vaughan?”

«But you must, otherwise how will you get home?”

-“«T can work that part of it all right,” was the confident
reply.

“How?”

“ There ll soon be a vessel sailing for Boston, and I shall
smuggle myself on board. The voyage won’t be so long
but that I can remain stowed away until she arrives.”

«But even then you won't dare go to Portsmouth.”

“Wouldn't 1? Just give me the chance, that’s all!”

«But don’t you fear being arrested as a deserter?”

“Bill Vaughan won’t talk so loud when we are home
again. My father can fix everything, once I am there.”

Phil believed the crime of desertion wouid not be
passed over so readily, even though Dick’s father was
reputed to be a wealthy man; but he forbore from press-
ing the matter further. It could easily be seen that the
visitor fancied anything he might do could be atoned for
with money, and it would be useless to make an attempt
to convince him to the contrary.
58. THE BOYS OF 1745.

Dick ate that which had been set before him, and then
looked around hungrily for more.

«That was all I had,” Phil said, interpreting the look.
“Tf you will wait, perhaps I can borrow something from
the man who is encamped close at hand.”

«Don’t try it!” Dick said, sharply, when Phil made a
motion to leave the shanty. “I haven’t got any too
much confidence in you, and don’t propose that word shali
be sent to Bill Vaughan.”

“J didn’t betray you before, therefore why should I do
so now?’

“JT won't give you a chance; there’s no knowing what
you might do for the sake of a pound or two out of my
capture.”

“Tam not so fond of money as that. If it was really
my duty to tell of your being on the island, I should do it
at all hazards.”

“You're a canting hypocrite—” Dick checked him-
self suddenly, as if he had spoken more plainly than was
his intention, and added, in a coaxing tone, “Look here,
Phil, we've always been friends, and you know I’m willing
to do you a good turn at any time, so now do one for
me when I am in such trouble.”

«What do you want?”

“Powder and ball. With plenty of ammunition, I can
shoot game enough to keep me alive until a vessel sails
for Boston.”

“JT have n’t got very much,” and. Phil shook his powder-
horn.
A CONFESSION. 59

«Tt ‘ll do till I come again,’ Dick said, as he stretched
out his hand for the horn. “If I had n’t wasted that shot
this afternoon I need n’t have come to-night, and, perhaps,
by a lucky turn, might have found a chance to leave this
place without your knowing anything about it.”

' Phil was on the point of handing the powder to his
companion when the latter spoke; but suddenly he drew



cause of his newly-aroused suspicions.

“What is the matter?” the visitor asked, sharply,
alarmed at the change which had come over his friend.
«What is the matter? Why don’t you speak, instead of
staring in that way?”

“Dick Sanbourne,” Phil said, in a low, accusing tone,
“it was you who tried to shoot Colonel Vaughan this
afternoon !’”

For an instant Dick acted as if about to deny the accu-

sation, and then spoke angrily :
60 THE BOVS OF 1746.

«Well, what if it was? Is that any business of yours?”

“Tt certainly is. My duty is to protect, or assist in
doing so, our officers, and —”’

“JT suppose you're running this whole war, aint you?
You protect the officers! You’d better go back to your
mother, where you belong, and not play at being a soldier
any longer. I shall settle my score with Bill Vaughan
before I leave here, and you can’t prevent me, mighty as
you act now.”

“TI shall do my best,” Phil replied, gravely, as he at-
tempted to rise to his feet.

Dick, who had been seated between Phil and the en-
trance to the shanty, sprang to his feet before the latter
could change his position, and, pushing him back with one
hand, twisted the powder-horn from his grasp with the
other.

Then, raising his musket as a club, he said in a guarded
tone, —

«Make one attempt to give an alarm, and I will strike
you down! I don’t intend to be drawn over the coals
when a blow will settle it all! Give me that!”

Before Phil had fairly recovered from the surprise
caused by the sudden change in his former friend, the
latter made a clutch at the pouch containing bullets,
which was on the ground near the bed of pine boughs.

‘Now I’ve got all I need, and can take care of myself.
I know this island better than any of these make-believe
soldiers, for I’ve been all over it, so it won’t make any
difference if you do raise an alarm. None of your crowd
can catch me, especially after dark.”
A CONFESSION. 61

Phil was not disposed to let the boy go to his own de-
struction without making one more effort to prevent it
and he said, in a kindly tone, —

“Stop, Dick, and think of what you are doing! It is
a mistake to believe your father can smooth matters over,
and by defying the whole colonial army in that way, you
cannot fail to make an outlaw of yourself. There is time
even now to take a different course.”

«“ Yes, after you know I shot at Bill Vaughan!”

« Suppose I promise never to tell what you have said?”

“Tt won't be safe to repeat the least word, remember
that!”

“Tt is my duty, and I must tell everything to-night,
unless you are willing to give yourself up. I feel certain
matters may be arranged now, if nothing is known of the
shooting, and you can take your proper place with us once
more.”

“J suppose you think you’re precious good, eh? Try-
ing to play the mighty over me because you've got on the
right side of that Vaughan! I’Il attend to my own af-
fairs, and yours, too, if you dare tell a single person that
I’ve been here!”

Then, standing over Phil to prevent him from rising,
Dick coolly loaded his musket, hung the horn and pouch
about his person, and moved slightly toward the door.

“Tf you show yourself outside this shanty for the next
hour, I’ll shoot you down,” he said, threateningly. “Ican
hide among the trees, and there’s yet light enough from
your fire for me to see if you sneak out. Keep a close
62 THE BOVS OF 1746.

tongue in your head about me and my affairs, or you'll
never reach Portsmouth again.”

Phil was too deeply engaged in thought to make any
reply to these threats. He knew it was his duty to raise
an alarm, regardless of whatever danger might threaten
him; but if he should do so, and Dick was taken prisoner,
there could be but one end to it all. To give his old
friend up would be condemning him to death without a
shadow of doubt, and that he shrank from doing.

Dick waited a few moments at the door of the shanty,
as if to assure himself he could gain the shelter of the
woods without being seen by the sentinels near the water’s
edge, and then, with a mocking “good-by,” disappeared.

«What shall I do?” Phil cried when he was alone. “If
I tell that he is on the island, the men will soon catch him,
and even though I’m not very much of a soldier, I know
full well what will be the result.” .

Then came the thought that he would confide in Colonel
Vaughan, keeping back the fact that it was Dick who
fired the shot which grazed the officer’s cheek, and plead
with him to use his influence in having the deserter
punished only by being sent home in disgrace.

This seemed the best way out of the difficulty which
Dick had brought upon himself, and Phil had but just
decided he would try the experiment when a commanding
voice was heard, apparently but a short distance from the
shanty.

« Halt, or I’ll fire!”

Then came a noise as of scuffling and the words in the
same voice:

A CONFESSION. 6 5

“Don’t make the mistake of trying that game! So, it
was you? I had just a suspicion this afternoon when I
saw your footprints. Now march ahead of me, and turn
ever so slightly to the right or the left if you wish to
die!”

It was Colonel Vaughan who had spoken, and Phil
understood Dick was a prisoner. The officer knew him.
as the would-be assassin, and, such being the case, the
deserter’s doom was indeed sealed.

Phil sat silent and motionless, sick with apprehension
regarding the boy whom he had called a friend, when
Dick and his captor entered, the former pale as death,
and the latter holding a pistol close to his head.

“JT had an idea my trap would work,” Colonel Vaughan
said to Phil, and the boy repeated, in amazement, —

«Your trap, sir?”

«Yes; I ordered you to remain here, believing this
deserter would pay you a visit if there were not too many
around.”

“How did you know he was alive?” Phil asked, in a
tremulous voice.

“J had no suspicion of it until I saw the prints of
Tyson’s shoes, and they could be explained in no other
way. Sanbourne was the only member of our regiment
missing, and I concluded, without being able to explain
how it happened, that he had contrived to save his lite.
Now call some of the men, and we’ll have him taken care
of for the night.”

Phil obeyed by going to the nearest ine and in a few
66 THE BOYS OF 1746.

moments Dick was marched away, his hands tied behind
his back to prevent the possibility of an escape.

Colonel Vaughan remained behind, and when they were
alone Phil asked, falteringly, —

«Did you know— Did you hear—”

«T saw him when he came, and waited where I could
overhear all that was said, for I wanted his own version of
the story. You should have told me he was here.”

“Jt would have been the same as condemning him to
death, sir, and I couldn’t have done that, for he and I
have always been good friends.”

“He acted particularly friendly toward you, I should
judge, from what I heard.”

“He is desperate. This soldiering is different from
what he expected it would be, and —”

«There is no reason why you should try to find excuses
for him, lad,” the officer said, as Phil hesitated. “Tell

-me when you have seen him before.”

Phil related in detail the story of Dick’s visit on the
night the battery was abandoned, and concluded by
saying, — ,

“Tf he could be made to understand how serious his
offence is, I am sure he would act differently.”

“He will probably find out when he is brought up for
trial.” ,

«Then you are to send him home?”

“There is no necessity for that. A court-martial will
soon settle the matter, and while we are in the field there
will be little chance for interference in his behalf.”
A CONFESSION. 67

«But, Colonel!” Phil cried, in an agony of fear, “you
will not suffer any harm to come—lI mean that you will
not allow him to be shot for deserting?”

«Tt is not probable I shall have any. voice in the
matter. A certain important movement will be made
soon, and I am to have charge of it. Remain here until I
send for you, and try not to distress yourself over such a
worthless character as Sanbourne has shown himself to
be.”

With this advice Colonel Vaughan left the shanty, and
Phil threw himself. face downward upon the bed in bitter-
est distress of mind.
CHAPTER V.
A NIGHT ATTACK.

T was little sleep Phil had on the night Dick was

captured. He could not drive away the fear that he
had been instrumental in bringing about the present con-
dition of affairs, although it was impossible to explain
even to himself how that could be.

Horrible visions of his friend on the scaffold rose con-
stantly before his eyes, and more than one wild scheme
for saving the misguided boy came into his mind, only to
be dismissed as impracticable.

“T would do anything, regardless of my duty as a
soldier, to save him from a shameful death,”’ he said, over
and over again; “but there is no way by which I can aid
him, except through the kindness of Colonel Vaughan,
whom he tried to kill.”

Until late on the following afternoon he was left to his
own painful reflections, and then came a messenger with
word that he was wanted at headquarters.

Almost any kind of action was preferable to remaining
idle, with no companion but the terrible thoughts which
would not be banished, and Phil hastened to obey the
summons.

It was necessary to remain outside General Pepperrell’s
quarters some time before Colonel Vaughan was ready to

68
A NIGHT ATTACK. 69

receive him, and the boy had ample opportunity to ques-
tion the sentinel on duty.

“Do you know what was done with the prisoner taken
last night ?”’ he asked, and such discipline as was enforced
in the encampment did not prevent the soldier from _halt-
ing in front of Phil as he replied by another question :

«Did you know the young scoundrel?”



“We both live in Portsmouth, and he has always been
my friend.”

“He won’t play the friend to any one much longer.”

“What do you mean?” Phil asked, the words coming
with difficulty from his trembling lips, because he knew
full well what the answer would be.

“He'll be hanged, as he deserves, of course.”

«But he’s only a boy,—a few months more than six-
teen years old.”

“Tf he wasn’t half that age the punishment would n't
7O THE BOYS OF 17485.

be any too severe. I hear he’s been over to the enemy,
and most likely has told them all he knows. Then, again,
he tried to kill Colonel Vaughan, which is good reason for
the sentence that will surely be pronounced.”

Phil remained silent several moments, during which the
soldier resumed his leisurely pacing to and fro.

Then the boy asked timidly, as he walked by the side of
the man, — }

“Don’t you think General Pepperrell will pardon him ?
It can’t be he would allow the son of one he has always
been friendly with to be hanged.” |

“Tf I believed there was any danger the young fiend
would escape death I’d shoot him down this minute!”
the soldier cried, angrily, and Phil turned away in despair.

This man’s opinion was probably shared by many, if
not all, of his comrades, and the deserter’s friend began
to understand that perhaps he was the only person in the
encampment who sympathized with the prisoner.

At this moment Colonel Vaughan appeared, and leading
the boy a few paces aside, said in a low tone, —

“Tt had been promised that I should lead an attack this
night ; but the men have stipulated for Captain Brooks
to command them, and I am forced to lose the sport or
follow as a private, therefore I cannot take you with
me.” .

«Shall you volunteer ?”

“Certainly. The plan is all my own, and I want to see
how it is carried out.”

«Then what prevents me from doing the same thing ?”’
A NIGHT ATTACK. 71

“You can if you choose, and I’ll be glad to have you.
Brooks is not the kind of a man who will take advice from
me, and we shall be obliged to follow his instructions,
whether they be wise or not; but there will be plenty of
fighting, which is what all of us need just now.”

“In what way shall I volunteer?” Phil asked, thinking
he would rather be engaged in any dangerous service than
remain in camp dwelling upon Dick’s terrible fate.

“T will attend to that part of it. We should go now,
for the expedition starts from the Grand Battery, and
there is no time to lose, if we would join the party.”

Phil was ready as soon as he replenished his supply of
ammunition, and the two set out in silence. Colonel
Vaughan was in no mood for conversation, because of his.
disappointment at not being allowed to lead the assaulting
party, while Phil could think only of his former friend.

On arriving at their destination Colonel Vaughan went
directly to Brigadier Waldo, who still remained in charge of
the battery abandoned by the French, and then it was that
Phil began to realize the danger which might be en-
countered.

« As the matter is being arranged,’ Waldo said to his
friend, “it is a foolhardy piece of business, and can only
result in disaster. I have written to the general that I
doubt most seriously whether straggling fellows, three,
four, or seven out of a company, ought to go on sucha
service, for there will be no concert of action among them.
What makes it the more foolish, is that many of them are
under the influence of liquor, and should be under guard,
72 THE BOYS OF 17465.

instead of trying to surprise a detachment of regulars
within particularly strong works.”

Then the brigadier was summoned by one of his officers
who was superintending the making ready of the boats,
and Phil asked, —

“What is the service we are going on?”

“I have proposed that an assault be made upon the
Island Battery, which commands the harbour, and pre-
vents our ships from entering. I believe the works could
be carried, but not in such a way as is to be tried.”

“ Do you still intend to accompany the party, sir?”

“Most certainly; but since matters are in the condi-
tion described by Waldo, perhaps you had better remain
behind.”

“T would prefer to go with you, sir.”

«Very well, then, we’ll say no more about it. Stay
here where I can find you without difficulty, and I'll take

-a turn around the battery.”

Three hours later Phil saw the colonel again, and the
moment had arrived for departure. It was so dark when
he stood on the beach that he could not decide how many
boats were to be used to transport the soldiers, but in the
gloom it appeared as if there must have been at least
twenty. /

He followed the colonel into one of them, which already
appeared overloaded, and the frail craft was paddled,
instead of rowed, out over the wind-swept waters, the
boisterous waves dashing over her gunwale every few
seconds, obliging the men to bail incessantly in order to
keep her afloat.
A NIGHT ATTACK. 75

Then came the dangerous work of disembarking while
the surf was dashing high upon the rocks on either side
of the narrow cove, and when about half the force were
on shore; they broke the silence by three cheers, regard-
less of the fact that they had come for the purpose of
surprising the enemy.

“ That settles the fate of this attempt,’ Colonel Vaughan
said, in a low, angry tone to Phil. «I cannot understand
what Brooks is thinking of to let the men announce their
presence when he is not prepared for the attack!”

Before a reply could have been made to this remark a
sudden glare illumined the darkness in the immediate
vicinity of the battery, and from out of it came a perfect
hail of iron missiles. It seemed to Phil as if every living
thing on that narrow strip of shore must be mowed down
by the shower of balls and bullets, yet he himself re-
mained untouched after the deadly fire had continued
several seconds.

Finally, high above the roaring of the heavy guns, could
be heard the command of Captain Brooks for his men to
advance, and Colonel Vaughan cried to Phil, —

“Tt is little less than suicide, lad; but we must not be
the ones to show the white feather. It is simply a
slaughter of the men, without possibility of success; yet
we are bound to obey orders.”

After the first fush of fear Phil forgot the danger, and
eager to prove to the officer who had shown him so much
kindness that he was not a coward, pressed boldly
forward, stumbling here over the bodies of the fallen, or
76 THE BOYS OF 1745.

making a a@étour there to avoid a group who were
shooting at the stone walls, regardless of their ‘com-
mander’s orders.

Phil was at the very foot of the works, where scaling-
ladders were being raised, and had already begun to
ascend oné when a bright flash burst directly in his eyes;
there came a sudden sensation of numbness, and all was a
blank.

When next he was conscious, an intense pain asserted
itself in his left shoulder; it seemed as if his clothing had
been glued to that portion of his body, and he was rising
and falling as though suspended in mid-air.

«Where am 1?” he asked, feebly, surprised that it was
not possible to speak louder.

«With a dozen or more nearly as badly wounded as
yourself, heading for our own side of the harbour,” a
voice replied.

«Am I wounded?”

«That you are, and badly, so I’m told. I’ve lost part
of one foot, but ¢#az’s a hurt I shall soon get over.”

Phil fancied the man intended to convey the idea that
he might not recover, and he mildly wondered whether
death in such a form would be painful.

“You can thank Colonel Vaughan that you’re here,
instead of being left on the beach at the mercy of the
enemy. He it was who lugged you on his back through
the surf, when it was all a man could do to care for
himself, much less come off hampered with a burden.”

“Ts the colonel safe ?’’ Phil asked, after a brief silence.
A NIGHT ATTACK. 77

« Ay, that he is, and in one of the other boats. If he
had had command of this expedition, I’m thinking we
would n’t be crawling back like disabled crabs, leaving
behind half of those who started out with us.”

«Then it has all been a failure?”

“Yes, so far as the Island Battery is concerned, and
weak leadership killed the only chance we had of taking
it; but the city will fall into our hands some day, please
God, and I’ll have given one foot toward the general
result, though it seems a wicked waste of flesh and blood
to give them up in such a foolish attack as this has
proved to be.”

Phil heard the last words but faintly; the pain of his
wounds was rapidly overcoming him, and before the boat
with her cargo of suffering humanity gained the land he
was unconscious again.

When he next realized anything, he heard a strange
voice say, —

“He may pull through, with youth and strength on his
side; but it will be a narrow squeeze. Do not attempt to
move him, and in forty-eight hours we shall know the result.”

Phil was lying on a softer bed than he had enjoyed
since leaving home, and without touching those portions
of his body which were causing him so much pain, he
knew the wounds had been bandaged.

Once he fancied Colonel Vaughan bent over him, laying
a cool hand on his burning head ; but it was impossible to
distinguish either word or action very clearly. He was in
a stupor not unlike a disagreeable dream.
78 THE BOYS OF 1748.

At times the pain seemed overpowering, and then he
would sink into what might have been a ‘swoon, only to
arouse suddenly to the knowledge ‘that’ he had : ‘been se-
riously wounded, — was, perhaps, dying.» ~ -

He was in a log hut, which evidently contained two
apartments, and in front of the inner door” a | soldier stood,
as if on guard.

It was day when he understood. this: much, and he
believed but a few hours after - the. disastrous. attack had
been made. a

When next he took note of his surroundings, another
night had come. Only he and the sentinel. were in the
room, and he wondered why a guard should be there.

He moved slightly, and the a oe quickly to
his side. :

« Are you here to take care of me?” Phil whispered,
and the man shook his head.-

“I’m on duty to make certain oe young deserter
don’t slip through our fingers ae and the sentinel
pointed toward the door.

Instantly he understood it all. Dick was confined in
the next room, and since the hut had not been built
strongly enough for a prison, a guard was stationed over
him. :

“Do you think they will punish him?” he next asked.

“That they will! Bless you, it has all been: settled in
proper order. When the sun rises again eu won't be
troubled by having a sentinel here.” aby s

During a moment Phil believed he was on the point of
A NIGHT ATTACK. . 79

swooning once more. “When the sun rises again!”
That was as much as if the man had said when another
day dawned Dick Sanbourne would pay the extreme
penalty for his misdeeds !

The wounded boy struggled desperately to resist the
sensation of faintness which was creeping over him. He
believed it was absolutely necessary to retain possession
of all his faculties, although he had no idea that it might
be possible for him to aid the condemned prisoner.

When. the sentinel took up his station by the door
again, Phil began to wonder why. it was the trial and
sentence had followed so quickly. He knew nothing had
been done in that way when he left headquarters with
Colonel Vaughan, and yet the entire matter seemed to be
settled.

It was a long while before he managed to whisper, -——

«When did —did Dick have his trial ?”’

«The day before yesterday.”

«Why, it was then we made the attack.”

“You've lost run of the days, lad, that’s all.”

“ How long have I been here ?”’

“You were wounded Monday night, and to-morrow is
Saturday.” .
CHAPTER VL
AN APPEAL,

RIEVOUSLY wounded though he was, Phil forgot
his own suffering as he thought of the mental
agony which the unhappy prisoner must be enduring.

It was almost maddening to realize that he was power-
less to stay the sentence of the military court,—that a
boy, who until lately had been his friend, would soon be
executed.

For an instant he resolved to demand an audience with
General Pepperrell, in order to beg for pardon; but a brief
time of reflection was sufficient to convince him that the
general would not listen to his prayer against the judg-
ment of his officers.

Could Colonel Vaughan effect anything? Phil doubted
if that were possible, or, being so, whether he would
make an effort to save the life of one who had tried to
murder him. ,

The sentinel, at a loss to account for his sudden silence,
drew nearer the couch to look at the wounded boy.

«What time is it?” he asked of the man.

“Tt lacks about half an hour of midnight, when I shall
be relieved.”

«Would you do me a favour?”

«Of course I would, lad! I’m told you showed true

So
AN APPEAL. 8I

grit at the assault when the odds were all against our
side, and I’m not the only one who is proud of what you
have done.”

«“T want to speak with the prisoner a moment. He
and I are old friends; we came from the same town; I
cannot bear to think of his being led away to a cruel
death’ before I have had a chance to say good-by.”

«1 don’t know why you shouldn’t go in,” the sentinel
said, thoughtfully, “though it won’t be a very pleasant
visit. The doctor might think you oughtn’t to move
around so much, for he said it wouldn’t be safe to
carry you to Colonel Vaughan’s quarters, and he is
lodged but a short distance away.”

“Tt can do me no harm, — surely not as much as lying
here eating my heart out with sorrow for the poor fellow,”
and Phil made one attempt to rise, but fell back utterly
exhausted with the faint effort.

«That young villain isn’t worth a thought from you,”
the soldier said, emphatically, as in his rude way he tried
to move the invalid’s head to a more comfortable position.

“You wouldn't say so if he was an old friend of
yours.”

“« Perhaps not, lad, perhaps not. It don’t stand to
reason you’re hardened to such things yet; but you soon
will be if you continue soldiering.”

“I must go to see him,” Phil cried, and again he
attempted unsuccessfully to move.

“Come, come, we can’t have anything more like that,”
the sentinel said, in what he intended should be a sooth-
82 THE BOVS OF 1745.

ing tone. ‘Another struggle and you’ll set the blood to
flowing. It would be the price of your life to walk from
here to where he is.”

“TI can’t help it; I’m determined to go if such a thing
be possible. Most likely it’s my last chance.”

« But I won’t allow you to take the risk,” and now the
soldier spoke sternly. “That fellow isn’t worth the pain
you’re enduring through him, and I'll put a stop to it.”

«Do you mean you won't let me go where he is?”

«T’ll bring him here. I reckon it isn’t jest what a

sentinel oughter do; but if you’re bent on seeing. him, it
shall be done. I’ve had no orders agin it, and will be
bound there ain’t the least show of his getting away while
I stand at the door.”
_ The man did not wait for Phil to reply, but went at
once to the inner room, and the invalid trembled with
excitement as he waited for his comrade who was so soon
to be put to death. ,

The interview was not long delayed.

Phil could hear a confused sound, which he fancied was
caused by the efforts of the soldier to remove the fetters
from the prisoner’s limbs, and then Dick appeared.

Had he seen him anywhere else Phil would not have
recognized him as the lad who sailed from Portsmouth in
the good sloop “ Vigilant.”

He no longer walked erect, with head. carried well
back, as if glorying in his youth and strength, but was
bent, like an old man, while on every feature of his face.
was written the story of most abject terror.
AN APPEAL. 83

“Oh, Phil! Phil!” he cried, coming forward as fast as
the soldier would permit, and throwing himself down by
the wounded boy’s side.“ Does it seem possible that they
have the right to kill me! Save me, Phil! Save me!
I know you can, because every one is telling how brave
you have been!”

“Poor Dick! Poor Dick!” and Phil laid his hand on



the boy’s head. “It is hard, oh, so hard! but I can do
nothing. No one would listen to me.”

“There is not another person here who will speak for
me, and you mast do something! I can’t die now! I
can’t, Phil, and I haven't a friend left, for every one thinks
death is only what I deserve.”

“There’s no use in going on that way,” the sentinel
said, gruffly. “You won't do yourself any good, and I
sha’n't allow you to make Phil worse by such outcries.
84 THE BOYS OF 1745.

You should have thought of all this back there at Can-
seau, where you set up in opposition to all hands.” ,

“J didn’t think they would dare to kill me.”

« And because of not thinking, many another person
has got himself into trouble. If there’s anything you
want to say privately to Phil, go ahead; I’ll give you one
chance, though I’ve precious little sympathy for you, by
going near the door where I sha’n’t overhear what’s said.
You must talk fast, though, for the relief will be coming
soon.”

The soldier stepped back near the outside door, and,
leaning over the wounded boy, Dick continued in whispers
to beg him to save his life. ,

It was most distressing to Phil. Gladly would he have
given anything, — everything, simply to soothe the dis-
tracted prisoner, yet there was nothing he could say.

After his first outburst Dick appeared to grow calmer,

and whispered, cautiously, —

“Except for the fact that I am tied hand and foot, I
could have escaped at almost any time within the last two
days. Couldn’t you give me one chance, Phil? Just
think how horrible it will be to die in such a way! Can't
you make up your mind to help me?”

«What could I do, Dick?”

“ There must be a chance between now and daylight to’
untie the ropes —I only ask you to untie one! I can get
through the side of the hut, where a couple of logs are
loose.”

« But even then what would you do?”
AN APPEAL. 85

“J don’t know, Phil. Hide in the woods till the troops
" leave; it would be better to starve there than be hanged
like a dog to-morrow morning.”

«“T reckon you two had best be parted now; there’s no
use spending a long time when it must come at last, and
the sooner this thing is ended the better for both,” the
sentinel said, gruffly, as he came toward the bed.

Phil had just time before the man forced Dick away to
whisper in the despairing boy’s ear, —

“Tf there’s the least chance for me to do what you
want, I will, and watch as anxiously as you would for the
opportunity.”

Then the prisoner was led back; the ropes fastened
once more around his limbs, as Phil fancied from the
sound, and the sentinel returned to his post.

The invalid closed his eyes, that he might the better
think of what he had promised, and while he was thus
apparently resting comfortably, the sentinel who was to
guard the condemned until the last moment arrived.

The two men spoke together in low tones a few seconds,
and then he who had been so kind took his departure.

Unless an opportunity to assist Dick should occur
within three hours it would be too late, and Phil realized
that he must be fully alive to everything around him. A
short time previous it had been impossible to so much as
raise his head; but now he was resolved to get into the
next room, if he could do so secretly, even though at the
cost of his own life.

The sentinel looked in at the prisoner; paced. to and
86 THE BOYS OF 1748.

fro from one door to another, and then seated himself near
the invalid’s bed.

Watching eagerly from beneath his half-closed lids, Phil
saw the man nod from time to time, and it was evident he
was doing his best to fight off the inclination to slumber.

Finally he seemed to realize that it would be impossible
to keep his eyes open while in this position, for he leaped
suddenly to his feet, and began walking back and forth
energetically.

Ten minutes passed in this exercise, and then the
soldier drew from his pocket a pipe and knife.

« Blest if I’ve got so much as a crumb of tobacco,’ he
muttered, after searching his pockets carefully. “I can’t
stay here all night without a smoke !”

Glancing first at the door of the room in which the
prisoner was confined, and then toward the wounded boy,
the sentinel stood irresolutely in the centre of the apart-
ment while one might have counted twenty.

«There's no risk in going, for this boy is too weak to
help himself, and the other is tied where he can’t do
more ’n wink. There’s precious little danger of meeting
an officer around the encampment at this time of the
night ; all hands of ’em like their comfort too well to turn
out when there’s no particular reason for so doing.”

Leaving his gun leaning against the wall, he went out
into the night, and the opportunity so ardently desired by
Phil had come.

When the sound of the soldier’s footsteps died away in
the distance, the invalid raised himself slowly, battling





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AN APPEAL. 89

most desperately against the deathly faintness which
‘threatened to overcome him, and stood swaying from
side to side like one who has received a mortal blow.

Twice did he make the attempt before gaining the
door, and then he lurched into the room where Dick lay,
unable to guide his own steps.

How he succeeded in unfastening the ropes he never
knew ; but finally, he was dimly conscious of the fact that
it had been done, and made a supreme effort to regain the
bed.

He realized, or thought he did, that the prisoner
thanked him fervently, and promised sacredly he should
never regret having given him a chance for life; but the
-words were more like a murmur of the sea, which even
then was beating against the rocky coast to give warning
of a fast-gathering storm.

From that instant the thunder of all the guns which
had been hurling death and destruction into the doomed
city would not have been heard by him.

When the sentinel returned with the tobacco which had
seemed so necessary to his comfort, Phil was lying on the
bed with the blood flowing from his mouth, apparently
dead.

More than once had the doctor stated that the invalid
might die suddenly of hemorrhage, and the frightened
sentinel believed the predictions were fulfilled.

Without stopping to look in upon the prisoner, he ran
with all speed for the physician, and the moment for
Dick’s escape had arrived.
go THE BOYS OF 1745.

When Phil next opened his eyes to the things of this
world he was lying on such a bed as he had never
dreamed of before, in a room bright with gay hangings,
and bearing everywhere the marks of a woman’s hand.

By the side of the bed sat Colonel Vaughan, who was
regarding the pale, wasted boy with something very like
affection, as he said, triumphantly, —

“JY knew, under Madame Pinchon’s motherly care, you

- would recover, even though the doctor did insist you must
surely die!”

«What has happened?” Phil asked, in a tone so low
that it was hardly more than a whisper.

“Many things, my boy, which it will give you nies
to hear, the most important being that the city was. sur-
rendered nearly a week ago, and you are now quartered in
the home of a certain Antoine Pinchon, whose lodger I also
am. lation, and General Pepperrell sent a purse of money to your
mother, which will relieve her of all pecuniary troubles
for some time to come. Finally, you have been acting
the part of a dead boy for nearly three weeks, and it is
high time you began to assume the bearing of a live one.”

Phil waited to hear more, but the colonel leaned back
in his chair as if his budget of news was exhausted.

“Do you know anything about,—is Dick alive?”

“Look here, my boy, do you chance to know anything
of his escape?”

“T helped him, and want to make a confession to. the
general.”
AN APPEAL. gt

«“T suspected you had a hand in the matter, and advise °
you to remain silent on the subject. No good can come
of making any confession, and the least said is the

soonest mended. It may interest you to know, however,
that he has left the island.”

“ How did you learn that?”
“One of the natives told me he had seen ‘the boy







skulking in the woods, and I took it upon myself to find
an opportunity for him to sail. His death would have
done no good; the soldiers are so undisciplined that the
execution would not have been a lesson in the truest
sense, and after his painful experience he may mend his
ways.” .

Then the colonel told the story of the siege and final
surrender of the city in all its details, and concluded by
Q2 THE BOYS OF 17468.

stating that Phil was to be sent home in the next vessel
that sailed after he was sufficiently strong to undertake,
the journey.

Parkman writes:

“The news that Louisbourg was taken reached Boston at one
o’clock in the morning of the 3rd of July, by a vessel sent express.
A din of bells and cannon proclaimed it to the slumbering
townsmen, and before the sun rose, the streets were filled with
shouting crowds. At night every window shone with lamps, and
the town was ablaze with fireworks and bonfires. The next
Thursday was appointed a day of general thanksgiving for a
victory believed to be the direct work of Providence. New York
and Philadelphia also hailed the great news with illuminations,
ringing of bells, and firing of cannon.

“In England the tidings were received with astonishment and
joy that was dashed with reflections on the strength and mettle of
colonists supposed already to aspire to independence. Pepperrell.
was made a baronet, and Warren an admiral. The merchant
soldier was commissioned colonel in the British Army; a regiment
was given him, to be raised in America and maintained by the king,
while a similar recognition was granted to the lawyer, Shirley.”

Goold writes :

“ Beside being honoured with knighthood, General Pepperrell was
presented by the Corporation of London with a dinner service and
a silver side-table on which to display it. To my knowledge, there
is no published description of this numerous table service, or the
table which was made to bear it. At the time of its arrival at
Kittery Point, there was, probably, no set of plate in New England
approaching it in extent or elegance.”

Not until thirty years had elapsed did Phil hear of or
see Dick.
CONCLUSION. 93

Then he was a captain in the Continental Army, on the
staff of the commander-in-chief, and visited Cambridge on
military business, when he was surprised at being ac-
costed familiarly by a private soldier belonging to a regi-
ment from Connecticut. It was Richard Sanbourne,
who, since his escape from the colonial forces in front of
Louisbourg, had lived an upright, honest life, and now, as
he explained to Captain Towle, was trying to redeem
himself as a soldier.

THE END.
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