[Footnote 3:] '[The] Indian Mutiny,' Thornhill.]
[Footnote 4:] [Throughout] the campaign the Commissariat Department never failed: the troops were invariably well supplied, and, even during the longest marches, fresh bread was issued almost daily.]
[Footnote 5:] '[The] Indian Mutiny,' Thornhill.]
[Footnote 6:] '[The] Indian Mutiny,' Thornhill.]
[Footnote 7:] [It] consisted of the 3rd European Regiment, 568 strong, a battery of Field Artillery, with Native drivers and a few European Artillerymen, and about 100 mounted Militia and Volunteers, composed of officers, civilians and others who had taken refuge in Agra.]
[Footnote 8:] [The] police were suspected of having invited the insurgents who defeated Polwhele to Agra.]
[Footnote 9:] [Known] as the Doab.]
[Footnote 10:] [Colonel] Fraser died within nine months of our leaving Agra.]
FOOTNOTES, CHAPTER [XXII]
[Footnote 1:] No account of the quantity and description of supplies stored in the Residency had been kept, or, if kept, it was destroyed when the Mutiny broke out. Captain James, the energetic Commissariat officer, on receiving Sir Henry Lawrence's order to provision the Residency, spent his time riding about the country buying supplies of all descriptions, which were stored wherever room could be found for them. James was very severely wounded at the fight at Chinhut, and was incapacitated the greater part of the siege. It was only by degrees that some of the supplies were discovered; no one knew how much had been collected, and no record of the quantities issued from day to day could be kept. When Outram joined hands with Inglis, his first question was, 'How much food is there?' Thanks to Sir Henry Lawrence's foresight, there was an ample supply, not only for the original garrison, but for the numbers by which it was augmented on the arrival of the relieving force. Of this, however, Outram must have been ignorant when he despatched the little note to which I have alluded in the text.]