I was just trying to find the answer too. :)
its simple, just click move on the toolbar and move them into it.
it is believed that the 3rd troop and the 19th troop of the police and soldiers were involved in stockade.
neccesity
fort necessity
train transport ships, place your troops in them, and then drop them off on the island
Given the scenario you described , yes .
There was a fight going on at the time, they were afraid of the other troops killing them, and they would lose the war if the other empires decided to work together to overthrow the Assyrian empire.
There was a fight going on at the time, they were afraid of the other troops killing them, and they would lose the war if the other empires decided to work together to overthrow the Assyrian empire.
Initially Britain and France on one side and Germany and Austria-Hungary on the other. Later (after the disasterous Gallipoli campaign) New Zealand and Australian troops joined Britain. Also smaller countries that were parts of Britain, France and Germany's empires.
The Eureka Stockade was the gold miners' rebellion held in Ballarat, Victoria. On 1 December 1854, some of the miners built a wooden barricade, or stockade, from which they planned to defend themselves against licence hunts and arrests or other incursions by the authorities. At 3:00am on Sunday, 3 December 1854, 276 police and military personnel and several civilians stormed the stockade.
troops ...
A rebellion and civil disobedience by miners over the price of a licence. Though there were several other factors that led to the uprising. Mostly about the corruption in the local government. About 27 people were killed, mostly miners.
Confederate Troops