Page:The invasion of the Crimea Vol. 9.djvu/406

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376 INDEX. crippling policy, 81 — result of the inquiry, 92. War administration of Fiance, the, vii. 6 et seq. Warden, iii. 158. War Department, the, vii. 4')— no de- partment in 1793, 51— one formed in 1794, ib. — in 1831 there is a Depart- ment of War and Colonies, n> War Department, papers relating to the health of the army and the rare of the si ed to the, by the I lommittee, vii. 322. Wardlaw, Major, iii. 158; v. 149. War, English declaration of, ii. 119. Warlike impatience of French army, lition of, viii. 228. ' War Office,' the, vii. 13, 38. Warre, Colonel, ix. 177 et Warren, Colonel, iii. 89, 198, 208; vi. .,328 note, 415 note. Warren, Lieutenant, iii. 90 ; vi. 331. War-ships, Russian, the destruction of, at K-rtch, ix. 308 note. War, (he mechanics of, the light the naval attack pol threw on, • . 4 1 9. Wasp Tower, iv. 344, 353 et seq. on, iii. 210. Weare, iii. 167. Weare, Miss, vii. 417 note. Welib, Captain, v. ill, 229, 236, 327. C Smith, Colonel, iii. 15S. Weir, Lieutenant, v. 117. Wellesley, Sir Arthur (1809), vii. 403 note. Wellington, the Duke of, in France, i. 28 — his foreign policy, 38 note — his conference with Nicholas I., 70, 356 — how he dealt with a Secretary of Stale, ji. 273 note— and the defence of London, vii. 401 note, 403 note, 421 note, 429 note. Wellington era, the, vii. 62— the Wel- lington reign, 66 — its brief duration, ib., 78. Well-way, the, vi. 65 et seq., 107 et seq., 164 et seq., 457. • West Clin*' iii. 8, 8, 9e« seq., 53, 56, 60, 65, 75, 78. ■i nt, vi. 67. West, Lord, Colonel ,226,815 note, 429 — his com in, 430; ix. 169- succeeds Sir John Campbell, 176, 178— his reluctance to believe thai he was powei i cute an !:, 179— his efforts and direction to Gerald Graham, ISO — the sole means :.t his disposal, 181 — his vain efforts, 182 — the communications that passed between him e commander. Sir George Bron a, aoreland, Lady, vii. 117 nol note. West moreland; Lord, instructions to, ii. 115— at Vienna Conference, viii. 319. Eload, vi. 4 1 1 et seq. Ditch, the, at Eupatoria, viii. 51, Wetherall, vi. 447 note. Wetherall, Captain, ii. 282; v. 72 note; vii. 1 I all Q. A., Adjutant-General, ix. 291. rail, Major, iv. 8 nota, 16. n i . Lieutenant, v. 155. Whimper, iii. 90. Redoubts, the two, completion of, viii. 79— crushed and silenced, 1S8 — assault of, not followed up, ib. — i repaired, ib. ; ix. 90, 94, 98, ■ t seq., ill. While, Captain Robert, v. 229,231,236, 827. 'While Tower,' the, iv. 171 note, 177. Widdin, i. 40, 41. Wilbraham, Colonel, I d, vi. 242, 279 note. Willes, Captain, iii. 861. Williams, Captain, v. 113, 117. Williams, Mr George, ix. 47. Williamson, Captain, viii. 216 i.olv). Willis, Captain, i. 186, 111. Wilson, Captain (Coldstream Guards), 252, 30S note, 407. Wilson, Dr, 7th Hussars, vi. 254 note Wilson, John, Cornet, v. 117. Wilson, Private, vi. 2 12. Wilton, Colonel, vi. 405 note. Wimpfen, Colonel, vi. 391, 393, 406, 408, 409 ; vii. 406 note— his brigade ix. 109. Windham, Colonel, iv. 23; vi. 57 note, despatch, 226 note, 227 note. Windmill Heights, vi. 29. Windmill, the, vi. 45 et seq., 48 et seq., 55, 72, 104, 164, 307, 32s, 420, 464, 478. Windmill Ridge, the, vi. 82. Windsor Castle, Council of War at, viii. 242. Wing, iii. 158. campaign, problem raised by the memory of the, vii. ! Winter, Captain, v. 229, 236, 327. Wilder in the Crimea during 1854-55, vii. 152 Winter Troubles, the: determination of the Allies to winter on the Chor- oids, vii. 2 — their strait- I he resources of the country entirely at the command ol tho enemy, 4 — the Allied armies wholly dependent upon supplies broughl by sea, ib. — the French system of war administration, 6 — English system of military ad- ministration as existing before the quarrel with Russia, 11 — the Min- istry of War and Colonies, 12 — the War Office, ib. — causes which pre- vented England from having a real