[20] Francis Langston was afterwards colonel of the fifth horse, now fourth dragoon guards.
[21] War-Office Records.
[22] Ibid.
[23] War Office Records.
[24] Mémoires de Berwick.
[25] Lingard's History of England.
[26] London Gazette; War Office Records; Life of King James II., &c.
[27] War Office Route Book.
[28] London Gazette.
[29] "There were two priests in the garrison of Charlemont, and there happened a pleasant adventure between one of them and a dragoon of Colonel Hayford's regiment (the Royal Dragoons) as they were guarding the Irish towards Armagh. They fell into a discourse about religion; the point in hand was Transubstantiation: the dragoon, being a pleasant, witty fellow, drolled upon the priest, and put him so to it, that he had little to say, upon which he grew so angry that he fell a-beating the dragoon, who, not being used to put up with blows, thrashed his fatherhood very severely. Upon which, complaint being made to Teague, as he was at dinner with our officers at Armagh, all that he said was, he was very glad of it, adding, 'What te de'il had he to do to dispute religion with a dragoon?'"—Story's History of the Wars in Ireland, p. 63.