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HISTORICAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES.

advancing against them, with the instinct of a true soldier he led his fatigued troops to the attack, and, by a determined effort, succeeded in holding the enemy at bay long enough to enable his friends to escape, and to prevent all chance of his following their example.

fter several other struggles, wearied and worn out with hopeless and continued fighting, and not having eaten or drunk for twenty-four hours, he, with the remnant of his force, about forty men, was compelled to surrender.[1] He might well claim, as he afterwards did, that to the exertions of his battalion the preservation of the American army on that disastrous day was largely due. On the 5th of September, Col. Daniel Brodhead wrote: “poor Atly I can hear nothing of. Col. Parry died like a hero.” And the next day, Jos. Reed, in a letter to his wife, said: “I am glad Atlee is safe, because everybody allows he behaved well.”[2] The battalion lost in commissioned officers: killed, Lieut.-Col. Parry and Lieut. Moore; prisoners, Col. Atlee, Captains Murray, Herbert, Nice and Howell, Lieut. Finney, and Ensigns Henderson, Huston, and Septimus Davis; and missing, Ensign App. There were prisoners and missing among the non-commissioned officers and privates: —

 Sergeants.   Drummers.   Privates. 
Anderson's; Company,  1 0 9
Murray's 0 0 10  
Herbert's 0 0 8
Dehuff's 0 0 6
Nice's 0 0 9
Howell's 0 0 7
McClellan's 0 0 12  
Late Lloyd's   0 1 14  



1 1 75[3]
  1. Atlee's Journal, Penna. Archives, sec. series, vol. i, p. 511.
  2. Reed's Reed, vol. i, p. 231.
  3. Penna. Gazette, Sept. 11th, 1776.