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  • Aug. 1, 1795
  • Page 70
  • MONTHLY CHRONICLE.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Aug. 1, 1795: Page 70

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    Article MONTHLY CHRONICLE. ← Page 2 of 5 →
Page 70

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Monthly Chronicle.

league and a half distantfrom ours , all the mtrenchmento 01 which were bristled with cannon . We had already carried the first and second intrenchments , when a masked battery , the fire of which enfiladed our corps , opened upe-n u « , and did great execution among our troops . M . d'Hervilly was wounded in Ihe belly , but , " notwithstanding , commanded the retreat with great presence of mind . IS was effected without the least disorder , and covered by the gun-boats . The loss pf the enemy was far more considerable than ours . Very unfortunately it so happened , that Gneral Vauban , who had landed near Carnac , could not come up

in time to take the enemy in flank , whilst General Tintigniac harrassed them from another side . Reinforced by four regiments with the black cockade , who arrived yesterday under the order of M . de Sombreuil , we intend immediately to re-commence our attack . After the ' affair of the 16 th inst . no day passed without skirmishes . On the 20 th General Hoche harrassed the advanced posts of the Royalists the whole 1 day with constant firing , but the evening seemed to promise some repose . The regiment of Dresnay covered tbe left flank of the fort , and the fort itself was

garrisoned by the regiment of Hervilly . M . de Sombreuil covered the right flank with two battalions , and defended thepassage ' which the ebb tide forms on the strand . It was with great astonishment that in the dead of night a great number of musket-shots were heard in the fort , and at the break of day the tri-coloured

flag was seen hoisted in the same . The French seamen , who composed a part of the regiment of Hervilly , kept up a secret understanding ' with the enemy , massacred their officers , together with about 150 soldiers who remained faithful to their duty , and opened the gates o / the fort to the detachment sent by General Hoche . Count Sombreuil now merely exerted himself in saving as many individuals as fie could . A considerable number of women and children , whojiad taken refuge in the peninsula of Auraigreatly increased the embarrassments arising from such

, a situation . The gallant- Sombreuil chose the most favourable position to covet the embarkation , and maintained it with the utmost bravery , supported by the British gun-boats , which , however , on account of the low water , could not approach , the shore near enough to do great execution . About fifty of the brave warriors lyho . fought , around M .. de Sombreuil were able to effect their escape ; all the rest of the little army ,, amounting to 5000 men , surrendered prisoners of war . TheBishop of Dolseeing the impossibility of every one's being embarked

. , , said to his clergy , " Gentlemen , let us not embarrass the re-embarkation : let us go whither our duty calls us : " and all , animated by his . example , proceeded to the depot of the sick and wounded , and performed their ministerial functions . They were all taken . M . de Sombreuil , the Eishop of Dol , and some hundred ' s more of the emigrants taken on this occasion , have since been shot at Vannes .

A Treaty of Peace between Spain and the French Republic ; and another of Amity , Commerce , and Navigation , between England and America , , have beat ratified and confirmed in the course of the past mont'h .

HOME NEWS ' . CBOYDON ASSIZES . July 30 . Jeremiah Aversham , alias Abershaw , was tried on an indictment wherein he was charged with having been guilty of the wilful murder of David Price , a constable of Union Hall ,- in the Borough , on the evening of the 1 Mk . ot July lastat the Two Brewers public-housein Maid LaneSouthwark '

, , , ,: Mr . Garrow opened the case . Barnard Windsor , a constable belonging to the Union Office , deposed that on the evening of the 13 th of JssSiH-y , he and the deceased went to the ' Two Brewers public-house ; in Maid Lane , to apprehend the prisoner at the bar against whom they had received informations of his having been concerned in

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1795-08-01, Page 70” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 31 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01081795/page/70/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
LONDON: Article 1
TO OUR READERS, CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 2
PRICES OF BINDING PER VOLUME. Article 2
Untitled Article 3
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE, OR GENERAL AND COMPLETE LIBRARY . Article 4
ON THE PRESENT STATE OF FREEMASONRY. Article 7
HISTORY OF MASONRY. Article 10
CHARACTER OF BERNARD GILPIN, Article 14
THE KHALIF AND HIS VISIER, AN ORIENTAL APOLOGUE. Article 18
ANECDOTES OF HENRI DUC DE MONTMORENCI. Article 20
EXTRAORDINARY INSTANCES OF GRATITUDE. Article 24
EXTRACTS FROM A CURIOUS MANUSCRIPT, CONTAINING DIRECTIONS FOR THE HOUSEHOLD OF HENRY VIII. Article 25
BON MOT. Article 27
THE STAGE. Article 28
CHARACTER OF LOUIS THE SIXTEENTH. Article 29
A THIEF RESCUED BY AN ELEPHANT. AN AUTHENTIC ANECDOTE. Article 31
ANECDOTES OF THE LIFE OF THEODORE, KING OF CORSICA*. Article 32
ORIGIN OF ST. JAMES'S PALACE. Article 33
THE UNION OF LOVE TO GOD AND LOVE TO MAN, A SERMON, Preached in St. Andrew's Church, New Town, Edinburgh, Article 34
ACCOUNT OF AN EXTRAORDINARY NATURAL GENIUS, Article 42
PHYSIOGNOMICAL SKETCHES. Article 47
CURIOUS METHOD OF PROTECTING CORN. Article 50
ON COMPASSION. Article 50
ON MODESTY, AS A MASCULINE VIRTUE. Article 53
SOME ACCOUNT OF BOTANY BAY, Article 55
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE . Article 56
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 58
ON POVERTY. Article 60
DISSERTATIONS ON THE POLITE ARTS. Article 61
POETRY. Article 64
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE, A SKETCH. Article 67
TO INDUSTRY. Article 67
WRITTEN IN MEMORY OF MY FATHER, Article 68
PORTRAIT OF AN HYPOCRITE. Article 68
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 69
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 69
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Monthly Chronicle.

league and a half distantfrom ours , all the mtrenchmento 01 which were bristled with cannon . We had already carried the first and second intrenchments , when a masked battery , the fire of which enfiladed our corps , opened upe-n u « , and did great execution among our troops . M . d'Hervilly was wounded in Ihe belly , but , " notwithstanding , commanded the retreat with great presence of mind . IS was effected without the least disorder , and covered by the gun-boats . The loss pf the enemy was far more considerable than ours . Very unfortunately it so happened , that Gneral Vauban , who had landed near Carnac , could not come up

in time to take the enemy in flank , whilst General Tintigniac harrassed them from another side . Reinforced by four regiments with the black cockade , who arrived yesterday under the order of M . de Sombreuil , we intend immediately to re-commence our attack . After the ' affair of the 16 th inst . no day passed without skirmishes . On the 20 th General Hoche harrassed the advanced posts of the Royalists the whole 1 day with constant firing , but the evening seemed to promise some repose . The regiment of Dresnay covered tbe left flank of the fort , and the fort itself was

garrisoned by the regiment of Hervilly . M . de Sombreuil covered the right flank with two battalions , and defended thepassage ' which the ebb tide forms on the strand . It was with great astonishment that in the dead of night a great number of musket-shots were heard in the fort , and at the break of day the tri-coloured

flag was seen hoisted in the same . The French seamen , who composed a part of the regiment of Hervilly , kept up a secret understanding ' with the enemy , massacred their officers , together with about 150 soldiers who remained faithful to their duty , and opened the gates o / the fort to the detachment sent by General Hoche . Count Sombreuil now merely exerted himself in saving as many individuals as fie could . A considerable number of women and children , whojiad taken refuge in the peninsula of Auraigreatly increased the embarrassments arising from such

, a situation . The gallant- Sombreuil chose the most favourable position to covet the embarkation , and maintained it with the utmost bravery , supported by the British gun-boats , which , however , on account of the low water , could not approach , the shore near enough to do great execution . About fifty of the brave warriors lyho . fought , around M .. de Sombreuil were able to effect their escape ; all the rest of the little army ,, amounting to 5000 men , surrendered prisoners of war . TheBishop of Dolseeing the impossibility of every one's being embarked

. , , said to his clergy , " Gentlemen , let us not embarrass the re-embarkation : let us go whither our duty calls us : " and all , animated by his . example , proceeded to the depot of the sick and wounded , and performed their ministerial functions . They were all taken . M . de Sombreuil , the Eishop of Dol , and some hundred ' s more of the emigrants taken on this occasion , have since been shot at Vannes .

A Treaty of Peace between Spain and the French Republic ; and another of Amity , Commerce , and Navigation , between England and America , , have beat ratified and confirmed in the course of the past mont'h .

HOME NEWS ' . CBOYDON ASSIZES . July 30 . Jeremiah Aversham , alias Abershaw , was tried on an indictment wherein he was charged with having been guilty of the wilful murder of David Price , a constable of Union Hall ,- in the Borough , on the evening of the 1 Mk . ot July lastat the Two Brewers public-housein Maid LaneSouthwark '

, , , ,: Mr . Garrow opened the case . Barnard Windsor , a constable belonging to the Union Office , deposed that on the evening of the 13 th of JssSiH-y , he and the deceased went to the ' Two Brewers public-house ; in Maid Lane , to apprehend the prisoner at the bar against whom they had received informations of his having been concerned in

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