E 513 .5 34lh .L2 Copy 1 < y^? A MEMORIAL OF WILLIAM SEVER LINCOLN, Colonel 34th Mass. Infantry. Brevet Brisr.-Gen. U. S. Volunteers. i8ii.— 1889. -^T^. /• SI 3 187 -J ^ "Sleep now, dear heart, in peace — Sleep, for each last farewell Is over now ! 't is time for rest More sweet than tongue can tell. Sleep now, dear heart, in peace. Thy labor's day is done — The sword and shield are laid aside This hour the strife is won ! " TO THE MEMBERS 34th MASSACHUSETTS INFANTRY, THIS SIMPLE MEMORIAL OF ONE WHO WAS PROUD TO BE "OF THEM," IS RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED. L. L. [Editorial, Worcester Evening Gazette, Nov. 9th, 1SS9.] GENERAL LINCOLN. We are pained to learn the'death of General William S. Lin- coln, although the event is not unexpected. He has for a num- ber of years been in failing health, and several times his illness has reached a point which appeared a fatal crisis. But (ieneral Lincoln was made of hardy stuff. In spite of dangers and bul- lets, wounds and pains, and the loss of vigor which comes to most men with declining years, he lived to round out to the fiill a long life. For a man not exactly in public life. General Lm- coln lias always been prominent as a citizen. The son of an honored governor of Massachusetts, he inherited sterling quali- ties, coumge, a strong will, faultless honesty and independence in opinion, a manly and complete integrity of purpose. Gen- eral Lincoln's career in the war was distinguished, but he did not push himself forward ; he was not ambitious. He took what came to him ; he filled every position in which he was placed with intelligence and scrupulous fidelity ; he did not seek promotion or prominence. Bred to the law, his quiet and simple tastes led him, after the war, to take up the work of till- ing his paternal acres. He managed his farm in a business-like way and found profit and pleasure in it. He did not live m obscurity ; his public services outside of politics were many and important. But his life like his character, was quiet, un- demonstrative, natural. General Lincoln made some enemies. His sturdy, honest independence would never allow him to conceal his opinion or talk diplomatic non-committals. He had very warm friends who appreciated his character, and none were more steadfast and sincere than the old veterans, "his men," who knew him so well and so thoroughly believed in him. In another part of this issue the details of his life are given. [Worcester Evening Gazette, Nov. 9, 1S89.J A HERO GONE. Death of General William S. Lincoln. An Eventful Life. An Exemplary Citizen and a Brave Soldier. Gen. William S. Lincoln died at his home, Willow Farm, this city, last evening, after a nearly two weeks' illness, caused by that dread disease, angina pectoris, from which he had been subject to repeated attacks for the past ten years of his life. In more than one of these several illnesses his life has been despaired of, but his strong constitution, determined will and wonderful rallying power brought him safely out of them all. But his relentless malady again attacked him on Sunday, Octo- ber 27, and this time it won the victory over the brave hero, who had on many a field of strife and carnage faced death and escaped its shafts. In previous attacks of the disease he had hovered near to the door of death, so near that all hope of life had nearly fled, yet he rallied again and again. It was because of his repeated narrow escapes from a fatal result of his illness that, until the past two days, his family and friends earnestly hoped he would survive this last attack. But this result was not to be realized, and the brave soldier and honored citizen has ffone from amonof us. William Sever Lincoln was born in Worcester, November 21st, 1811, and therefore lacked but a few days of having com- pleted his 78th year. He was the second son of Levi and Pen- elope Winslow Lincoln. It need scarcely be said here that his father was one of the greatest of American statesmen in his day, that for nine years he was the honored, chief magistrate of Massachusetts, and that his name is one of the brightest and noblest in the annals of the Commonwealth's history. The ut- most care and attention was given to the education of young William S., and at the early age of 14 years he entered Bow- doin College, Brunswick, Maine, one yeav in advance of his class. He therefore graduated when only 17 years old, and with the class of 1828. Only two years before, and from the same institution, had been graduated Longfellow and Haw- thorne. Thus the first year of his college life young Lincoln had these two for contemporaries. Immediately after his graduation Mr. Lincoln returned to Worcester, and entered upon the study of law in the office of his uncle, Enoch Lincoln, and Rejoice Newton. Before he at- tained his majority he was admitted to the bar and began its practice in the town of Millbury, then a town not greatly infe- rior in size and importance to the Worcester of that year. He continued the practice of law in Millbury for two years. In 1835, when in his 24th year, Mr. Lincoln married Miss Eliza- beth, the eldest daughter of Mr. George A. Trumbull, then a prominent business man and real estate owner in Worcester, and after whom the street and square bearing the name is called. In 1837, Mr. Lincoln, like thousands of other New England young men, caught the Western fever, which had its culmina- tion in his pulling up stakes and moving to the then flourishing town of Alton, Illinois. He had little more than become estab- lished in Alton, and begun practice, when the famous Lovejoy tragedy transpired. The killing of Rev. Elijah Parish Love- joy on the 7th of November, 1837, is regarded by some as the real beginning of the War of the Rebellion or at least as the first overt act in that conflict. In the trial that followed the death of Lovejoy, Mr. Lincoln was the town's attorney, and there- fore his name is linked with, thus early, an event which, at the time of its occurrence, convulsed the whole country in in- tense excitement, and the story of which will ever be a thrill- ing page in the history of the anti-slavery conflict. Alton, at the time Mr. Lincoln first made it his home, gave rich promise of becoming an important city. Chicago had hardly been founded and there were no particular facts about it then to give it especial importance. But the promises about Alton were not fulfilled, and after a residence of about ten 8 years Mr, Lincoln returned to Worcester. While in Alton he secured a large practice, however, but it seems that he longed for the home of his boyhood, a yearning not at all strange when it is remembered that the love of home is so pronounced a trait in the whole Lincoln family. Mr. Lincoln was one of the few attorneys of Worcester to be admitted to practice before the United States District Courts. On his return from the West his love for rural pursuits, which in the Worcester family of Lincolns amounts to a passion, led him to engage in farming. His farm at this time comprised a large portion of what is now called the West side, and his farm residence, which he built for himself, was what is now the home of his son Levi Lincoln, on Elm Street. When he first occu- pied this house there were only three others that might be seen while standing upon its front porch. The farm as late as 1850 maintained 18 head of stock. Later Mr. Lincoln lived on a farm in Quinsigamond, which he inherited from his uncle, John W. Lincoln, who received it through successive generations from the original grant. This farm Mr. Lincoln sold to Mr. Ichabod Washburn and bought Willow Farm, which was ever after his home. In his life Mr. Lincoln did much to develop the agriculture of Worcester County. Every measure designed for the im- provement of it found him an active supporter and warm friend. He had been honored with the Presidency of the Worcester Agricultural Society, and was, to the last, a promoter of its in- terests. At the last annual meeting of the Society Gen. Lin- coln was present and participated in the procedings. He spoke upon several of the questions that came before the meeting, and those present will recall with what earnestness and vim he en- tered into the spirit of the meeting. Early in life Gen. Lincoln manifested a love for military affairs, and when (juitc young he became captain of the Wor- cester Light Infantry, then one of the finest military companies in the state and one in whose ranks have served from time to time men who, later in life, distinguished themselves on the fields of battle and in the councils of the nation. His father, Levi Lincoln, was the first ensign of the company and one of its original members. His uncle, John W. Lincoln, was one of its early captains, and under his command it marched to Bos- ton in 1814 in the war of 1812. Gen. Lincoln's brother, the late D. Waldo, was its commander for three consecutive years, thus making three Lincolns of past generations who had com- mand of this organization. In this generation it has been cap- tained by two sons of the General, Levi and Winslow S. In 1833, when only 22 years old. Gen. Lincoln was a Lieut. -Col. in a militia regiment. The military career of Gen. Lincoln had a irlorious consummation in the War of the Rebellion, in which he made for himself a name and a fame that shall never be forgotten. At the time of his enlistment he was considerably beyond the age for compulsory military duty, l)ut the fact that the perpe- tuity of the Union and the liberties of mankind were in danger were incentives enough for him. He entered the service in an hour of the Nation's depression, when its armies, then existing, had failed to subdue the enemy, and when the fiict that the war was the sternest of realities, was at last fully realized. On the oro-anization of the 34th Regiment, to which body of soldiers it is a proud honor to have belonged, he was commissioned by Gov. Andrew as its Lieut. -Colonel. In this regiment it was also his great pleasure and satisfaction to have, as a part of it, his old command, the Worcester Light Infantry. From the beo-innino- of his active service, Gen. Lincoln entered heart and soul into the spirit and duty of the hour, and he was at once recognized as a brave, skillful and competent officer. On the death of Col. Wells of the regiment, Lieut. -Col. Lin- coln was promoted to the colonelcy. At the battle of New Market, May 15, 1864, he was wounded and captured by the enemy. At this battle Capt. W. B. Bacon of Worcester and the 34th was killed. For many long and weary weeks Col. Lincoln lay in a Rebel prison in Harrisburg, Va. From this he, with others of his fellow prisoners, escaped, and after wan- dering for 17 days through the country of the enemy he reached the Union lines in safety, but as may be imagined in a pitiable 10 condition. Sick and wounded as he was, it is singular that one of his age could have survived the trials and hardships that were his lot while escaping to the Union lines. Gen. Lincoln reached the Union camp with terribly swollen feet. While es- caping, the general and his companions travelled by night, remaining hid in the woods and underbrush by day. They avoided every house on the way except when driven to one by the pangs of hunger. Once the escaping prisoners went two days and two nights without a drop of anything to drink. At last they found a pool of water and the general drank a canteen full at one draught. Just as they were about to resume the fearfully uncertain journey, they concluded to take another drink, but the smell of the water was now sickening to them. Finally they entered the Union lines, and once again they were under the protection of the stars and stripes. Gen. Lincoln closed his army career as a Brevet Brigadier- General. In the quietness of his home he wrote a history of the 34th Regiment. This volume is an exceedingly interesting work and is regarded as one of the best fetories of the war as far as it goes, extant. The closing pages are devoted to the story of his imprisonment and escape. In civil life Gen. Lincoln had served as Worcester City Mar- shal, and he was once an unsuccessful candidate for the mayor- alty, the nomination being pressed upon him. General Lincoln's most important public work was his ser vice on the Board of Trustees of the Worcester Lunatic Hospi- tal. He served for a long series of years, from 1871 to 1879 and during the building of the immense establishment at the Lake, when the outlay was very heavy, and the details of busi ness numberless, his administrative abilities were of c^reat ser vice to the state. He was a member of the Building^'commit tee of the Board, and gave a great deal of time to his duties visiting the Lake every day. ' On the occasion of the last re-unjon of the 34th Regiment Gen. Lincoln, then in feeble health, reviewed the regiment from a window in Clark's Building. While the command 7aXZ It faced to the front, saluted its old commander, and then gave 11 him three cheers. A little incident which happened at the same re-union aptly illustrates how the boys of the gallant regi- ment regarded Gen. Lincoln and of their love and esteem for him. At the business meeting of the command the question of the location of the next regimental re-union came up and Capt. Levi Lincoln moved that it be Springfield. Just then a soldier from Springfield spoke up and moved an amendment to Capt. Lincoln's motion to the extent of substituting Worcester for Springfield, "for," said he, "I want to see Gen. Lincoln again, if possible." The motion, as amended, was adopted without a dissenting voice. Gen. Lincoln leaves a widow and two sons, Levi and Wins- low S. Of his four sons, William, the oldest, died in the Re- bellion. He marched through Baltimore with the Sixth Regi- ment on the 19th of April, 18G1. George Trumbull, the third son, died in this city a few years since. [Special Dispatch to the Boston Herald] Worcester, Nov. 8, 1889. Gen. William S. Lincoln, one of Worcester's oldest and best known citizens, died at his home at 10 :30 to-night after a se- vere illness of neuralgia of the heart. Gen. Lincoln was the son of Gov. Levi Lincoln. He was born in Worcester, Nov. 22, 1811, was graduated from Bowdoin College in 1830 and was admitted to the bar in 1833. He practiced law for a time at Alton, 111., where he was city attorney, but he returned to Worcester in 1844, and has since lived here, devoting his time to caring for his large real estate interests. He joined the Massachusetts militia before he was 20 years of age, and he maintained an active interest in it all his life. He was commissioned lieutenant-colonel on the breaking out of the war, and recruited the 34th Regiment, with which he served through the war. He w^as made its colonel in 1864, and at the close of the war he was brevetted a Brigadier-General for meri- torious sei-vice in the Shenandoah Valley. In May, 1864, he 12 was wounded in the shoulder in the battle at New Market, Va., and was taken prisoner. He escaped from the rebels at Har- risburg, Va., just as they were about to send him to Anderson- ville prison, and after spending twenty nights between the lines reached a Union camp. His wound permanently disabled his right arm. Gen. Lincoln has l^een president of the Worcester County Agricultural Society, member of the board of aldermen, city marshal, and was once a candidate for mayor. At the time of his death he was president of the 34th Regiment Association, and of the Worcester Light Infantry Veteran Association. His golden wedding was celebrated Oct. 22, 1885. He leaves a widow and two sons. [Worcester Evening Gazette, Nov. nth, i8S<;.] GEN. LINCOLN'S FUNERAL. The funeral of Gen. W. S. Lincoln will be one of the most impressive which Worcester has ever witnessed. The arrano-e- ments for it are now completed and the ceremony will occur at the Church of the Unity at half past 12 o'clock to-morrow. Preceding the public ceremony prayers will be held at Willow Farm, the general's late residence, and the remains will then ])e escorted to the church through Chandler Street, the Boulevard and Elm Street. It was announced, Saturday, that Rev. Cal- vin Stcbbins and Rev. Edward Everett Hale would officiate at the church, but word has been received from Dr. Hale that he will be unable to attend and his place will l)e filled by the Rev. George S. Ball, chaplain of the 25th Regiment. Mr. John Barker has charge of the funeral arrangements and is assisted by Mr. H. M. Witter. They have appointed the following ushers : Messrs. Stephen Salisbury, A. George Bul- lock, Charles F. Aldrich, Edwin Brown, Alexander DeW^itt, Charles H. Bowker, C. Willard Hamilton, Rockwood Hoar, Linus Childs. 13 The bearers will be Mr. J. A. Fayerweather of Westborough, to represent the Agricultural Society; Hon. W. W. Rice to represent the bar ; Mr. Wra. T. Merrifiekl and Dr. T. H. Gage, civilians ; Col. Levi Barker from the Light Infantry Veteran Association, and Messrs. C. H. Howland, Wells Willard and Henry Bacon to represent the 34th Regiment. Delegations will be present from the Light Infantry Veterans, from the In- fantry, the Grand Army and the 34th Regiment. The Conti- nentals will be represented by the staff and line officers of the command and a detail of honorary members. Colonel Hop- kins late last night issued special orders, as follows : — Headquarters Worcester Continentals, \ Worcester, Nov. U, 1889. i Special Order, No. 2 : — The staff and line officers of the command, with the following detail from the honorary members of the Worcester Continentals, who are requested to join the officers, are ordered to assemble at the Armory, on Tuesday, the 12th of November current, at 11 : 45 o'clock a. jl, to attend the funeral ser- vices of General William S. Lincoln, one of the bravest and most distin- guished soldiers who represented this city in the army of the Union, and an honorary member of this corps since its organization. The commanding of- ficer deems it most fitting that this detail should be made, as a tribute to one whose qualities as a soldier and a citizen, were so eminent as to make his interest in us an honor to the command. The detail will wear their respect- ive corps badges and the usual mourning emblems. detail of honorary members. Gen. Josiah Pickett, Sheriff A. B. R. Sprague. Capt. John S. Baldwin, Col. Edward J. Russell, Capt. James K. Churchill, Capt. William A. Gile, Capt. C. H. Pinkham, Lieut. S. W. Goddard, Joseph Mason, George Sumner, James A. Norcross, John D. Chollar, James E. Benchley Capt. Nathaniel Paine, Henry A. Marsh, Edwin Ames, Charles Baker, Col. E. B. Glasgow, Lieut. Nathaniel Liscomb, A. C. Munroe, A. P. Marble, Augustus E. Peck, Lieut. Willard F. Pond, Elisha W. Sweet, Henry S. Pratt. By order of W. S. B. HOPKINS, Lieutenant-Colonel. AARON S. TAFT, 1st Lieutenant and Adjutant. 14 Seats in the body of the church will be reserved for the or- ijanizatioiis of which Gen. Lincoln was a member. A meeting of the local members of the 34th Regimental As- sociation was held in the reading room of Grand Army Hall yesterday afternoon, to take action on their late president's death. Members of George H. AVard Post 10 also attended the meeting. It was informal, and various suggestions were made. As the Post will not turn out it was thought best for all members of the 34th Regiment who could to attend in a body, and they will meet at Horticultural Hall for that pur- pose at 11 :30 o'clock a. m., to-morrow. A large number of out of town members of the regiment are expected to attend the funeral. The interment will be at Rural Cemetery. The music at the services will include selections by a male quartette, under the direction of Mr. John N. Morse, Jr. Af- ter the services in the church are over, the body will be re- moved to the vestibule, to enable the general's friends to have one last view of the remains. The organizations with which he was connected will remain in the church until the others have passed out, and will then form in line to escort the re- mains to burial. All past members of the 34th Massachusetts Regiment are requested to meet in the library room of Horticultural Hall, to-morrow, at 11 :30, sharp, for the purpose of attending the funeral of their late colonel. The Light Infantry will march to the funeral. Some 20 meml)ers of the Light Infantry Veteran Association met in the headquarters of the organization, rooms 6 and 7, Clark's Building, this morning, and took preliminary steps re- garding: the meeting to-night, of the Association, to take action upon Gen. Lincoln's death. A committee was appointed to draft resolutions on the death of their late associate, and pre- sent them at this eveningf's meeting^. The committee consists of Cols. Barker and Williams, Major Stiles and Capt. Childs. 15 [Worcester Evening Gazette, Nov. 12th, 1SS9.] GEN. LINCOLN'S OBSEQUIES. Adresses by Rev. Calvin Stebbins and Chaplain Ball. The funeral of General William Sever Lincoln occurred to- day, and was one of the most impressive which has ever been held in this city. The attendance at the church was large, and many veterans from outside the city were present to swell the ranks of his old regiment, the 34th. The floral tributes at the bouse, where prayers were oflfered, and at the church were unusually beau- tiful. The ceremony, with its attending martial features, was pe- culiarly dignified, and the addresses at the church by Rev. Calvin Stebbins and Rev. Geo. S. Ball were in full sympathy with the occasion. Gen. Josiah Pickett and Major E. T. Raymond had general supervision of the various military organizations during the day. The 34th Regiment. The members of the 34th Regiment met in the library of Horticultural Hall to do honor to their old colonel. In the room were two portraits of Gen. Lincoln, which attracted much attention from the veterans. One of them was taken six years ago ; the other recently. The soldiers expressed a desire to have copies of the latter given them, and this will be done by the general's family. The ofiicers present were Col. George E. Goodrich, Capt. John A. Lovell, Capt. Henry Bacon, Lieut. Fred A. Judd, Lieut. R. W. Walker, Capt. H. T. Hall, Capt. D. Holden, Capt. Wells Willard, Quartermaster C. H. Howland, Lieut. George L. Murdock, Lieut. John E. Caligan. Over 100 mem- bers of the regiment were present, and practically all were dressed in citizens' clothes, although here and there might be seen an army cap and badge, and occasionally a coat of blue. The veterans all wore white gloves and the usual mourning em- 16 blem. The line was formed shortly after 12 o'clock under command of Col. Goodrich and marched to the church. The veterans l)ore furled colors, and carried a marker given Gen. Lincoln by Gov. Andrew. The Light Infantky. The Light Infantry, of which Gen. Lincoln was the oldest officer, assembled at their armory on Front Street at 11 :45. The men were in full uniform and wore the usual emblem of mourning. They marched to the church under direction of Lieut. Fairbanks. The command was headed by Worcester Brass Band, and marched to the muffled beating of the drum. At the church they were drawn up and received the remains. The Continentals. The Continentals marched from their armory to the church, under command of Capt. E. A. Wood of Company A. DETAIL OF HONORARY MEMBERS. Gen. Josiah Pickett, Sheriff A. B. R. Sprague, Capt. John S. Baldwin, Col. Edward J. Russell, Capt. James K. Churchill, Capt. William A. Gile, Capt. C. H. Pinkham, Lieut. S. W. Goddard, Joseph Mason, George Sumner, James A. Norcross, John D. Chollar, James E. Benchley, Capt. Nathaniel Paine, Henry A. Marsh, Edwin Ames, Charles Baker, Col. E. B. Glasgow, Lieut. Nathaniel Liscomb, A. C. Munroe, A. P. Marble, Augustus E. Peck, Lieut. Willard F. Pond, Elisha W. Sweet, Henry S. Pratt. Light Infantry Veterans. A laro-e delegation of the Worcester Light Infantry Veteran Association, under command of Col. J. M. Drennan, marched from their headquarters to the church. Post 10. The Grand Army was well represented. All who attended the services appeared in citizens' suits, wearing the badge of mourning. Commander A. M. Parker was in command. 17 At the House. The services at the house began soon after 11 o'clock. There were present a very large number of relatives and immediate friends, besides the family. The ushers here were Mr. John Barker and Mr. Willard Hamilton. The services consisted of the singing of " Nearer My God to Thee," by a quartette con- sisting of Messrs. John N. Morse, W. F. Merrill, B. A. Bar- ber and J. H. CafFerty. Prayer was offered by Rev. Calvin Stebbins and the benediction. At the close of the short and simple services the funeral cortege was formed and proceeded to the church by way of Chandler Street, Park Avenue and Elm Street. It was 12 : 20 o'clock on the arrival of the pro- cession at the church. Here the Worcester Light Infantry, Lieut. Fairbanks commanding, were drawn up in line to receive the dead. As the body was taken into the church the Worces- ter Brass Band played a choral. Before the arrival of the funeral cortege the various organizations attending the funeral had entered the church, except the Light Infantry, the guard of honor. The last of those to enter the church was the 34th Regiment Association, about 70 men. Col. Goodrich command- ing. They marched with silent tread and carried their old and honored flag under which these same veterans had marched up the Shenandoah Valley to victory with their commander, to whose voice, now silent in death, the brave veterans had on many occasions been wont to respond. The old regimental marker was also carried, and both emblems were draped and furled. There was a large concourse of people in the street, silent watchers of the proceedings. The detail of police consisted of Patrolmen Garland and Ward and these remained in the vesti- bule of the church during the services as did also the Light Infantry. The Floral Tributes. The floral tributes were elaborate and extensive alike, with- out exception, beautiful and appropriate to the utmost degree. Noticeable among them were a pillow with a ground of English 18 ivy leaves, on which was a heart of white chrysanthemums, a shoulder strap with star, while at each upper corner was a white camelia, and at the right hand corner was a spray of Catherine Mermet roses. The heart of chrysanthemums was emblemati- cal of the 24th army corps to which the 34th Regiment belonged. The shoulder strap consisted of first an outer row of pieces of yellow Japanese chrysanthemums, then a row of sapiano roses and a field of English violets, with star, the insignia of his rank, of yellow immortelles. The entire piece was of exqui- site beauty and grace. A second pillow was the tribute of the Worcester Light In- fantry. The ground work was of white carnations, with pan- sies and roses in the corners. In the centre was a field of white German stalks with the letters " W. L. I." in blue immortelles. There was a basket of white chrysanthemums fringed with ferns, the tribute of Mr. and Mrs. George B. Witter. These designs were from Thayer's. The Light Infantry Veteran Association sent a shield of Eng- lish ivy, bearing a scroll of white carnations on which were the letters ' - Clark, of South Hadley. Gen. Lincoln had held the office of President of the Mth Be^mnent Association ever since it was organized in IS^T. He several times declined the honor, but the - boy? " would never consent to his retirement, and aMioi^ he had not be«i able to anend the reunions of late years, he always sent some mes- sage to Aow that his comrades held a warm place in his hem. 28 RESOLUTIONS OF RESPECT. Action of the 34th Massachusetts Infantry. Whereas, Death has once more entered our ranks, and this time has taken the foremost of us all, while bowing to the Divine will we cannot but ex- press our deep and heartfelt sorrow at our gi-eat loss. Outside of his own Immediate relations we feel that none miss him more. Threefore, Resolved, That in the death of Gen. Wm. S. Lincoln, our former Colonel, and President of our Association since its organization, we lose a brave sol- dier, a gallant and successful commander, a wise counsellor, and faithful friend; whose only aim during our service was, that we should bring credit to ourselves as a regiment, and whose endeavors were always directed to our comfort and happiness. And while he lacked none of the qualities which were calculated to ensure perfect discipline in the field, he also recognized us as comrades in arms, looked upon each one of us as a friend whose neces- sities he was always ready to relieve — and whose appeal to him for advice and sympathy met with hearty response. Besolved, That to soldiers, no loss is heavier than the death of a superior officer — who has commanded them, and had their respect and love. And every member of the 34th highly respected and greatly loved Gen. Lincoln — almost whose last words were remindres to those about him of his undying love for his old regiment, and the recollection of those stirring events in its history he could not forget even in his closing hours. Besolved, That these resolutions be entered upon the records of this Asso- ciation, and that a copy of them be sent, by the secretary, to the family of Gen. Lincoln. Worcester, Mass., Nov. 12th, 1889. Action of the Worcester Light Infantry Veteran Association. At a meeting held Nov. 11th, the following resolutions upon the death of the late President of this Association, General William S. Lincoln, were introduced and adopted : Again our ranks have been invaded by the " Last Enemy," death, and we are detailed to pay our tribute of respect to the memory of our revered Pres- ident, General William Sever Lincoln. Outside the family circle none can feel his loss in a greater degree than that body of men with whom he has been so long identified— the Worcester Light Infantry Veteran Association — of which he was the head, and leading spirit. Never, while health and strength permitted, was he absent from his post of duty. For the past two years he has been too feeble to be present at our anniversary exercises, but he always sent us kindly greetings and was •' with us, if not of us." To-day all that is left us is his inanimate body and his memory ; therefore 29 Besolved, That we, his surviving comrades, while submitting to the law of the inevitable, from which there can be no reprieve, realize that in his death we have lost a loved commander, a wise counsellor, a faithful friend ; one who gave of his substance as freely as of his counsel when needed. We shall cherish his memory as a brave soldier and an honest man. Besolved, That we attend his funeral in a body, wear the usual badge of mourning, and that a copy of these resolutions be sent to the family of the deceased, to the daily press, and also be inscribed on the records of the Association. Respectfully submitted. F. G. STILES, Committee for the Association. Action of the Worckstku Agiucultuual Society. At 10 : 15 President J. Lewis Ellsworth called to order the annual meeting of the Agricultural Society Trustees in the li- brary of Horticultural Hall, and Secretary F. H. Chamberlain read the call. B. W. Potter, Esq., for the committee previously appointed, read resolutions upon the death of Gen. William S. Lincoln, and moved their adoption. In seconding the motion, Mr. H. H. Chamberlin said: " I suppose I knew Gen. Lincoln longer than any one here, and perhaps longer than any living member. I knew him and his brother Waldo 68 years ago, at the old Centre school house, and they were among the ])rightest and merriest of the school. A score of us, I remember, were attending writing school to- gether, when a life and drum were heard in the street and Wil- liam Lincoln's attention was so distracted that the teacher asked him which he would rather do, 'tend to his lessons or follow the soldiers?' 'I would rather follow them,' he replied, and school was dismissed in consequence." Mr. Chamberlin then paid an eloquent tribute to Waldo and William Lincoln in man- hood, and referred to the bullet which the latter carried in his shoulder for many years, a witness to his gallantry on the bat- tlefield. Mr. Stephen Salisbury also spoke feelingly regarding Gen. Lincoln and the interest which he always took in the society. 30 concluding with the suggestion, which was followed, to rise in voting on the resolutions. liesolved, That in the death of Gen. William S. Lincoln, this society has lost one of its most useful and intelligent members and a faithful and efficient officer, and we desire to express and to record our sense of bereavement and our high appreciation of distinguishing traits of his character. He had a loyal and steadfast character, which was able to stand prosperity and which no adversity could shake. He never deserted a friend because of his misfortune, nor any party or society to which he belonged because of its defeat or financial embarrassment, nor his country in the darkest hour of its history. The friends of his youth were the friends of his old age. His faith- fulness to this society for half a century was typical of his faithfulness to his family, his friends, and to every organization of which he was a member. His worthy but unassuming performance of the duties of good citizenship in peace, and his brave services as a fighting soldier in the War of the Rebel- lion, entitle him to our admiration and to the gratitude of his country. He lived among self-seekers in business and oflBce and in an age of high pressure in every department of human endeavor, yet he never joined in the scramble for office or wealth, but led a quiet home life amid rural scenes on a farm which he dearly loved. He even took pains to avoid notoriety and to keep out of the public view. He dwelt a little oack from the public highway and surrounded his house with beautiful and stately trees, which not only sheltered his home from the storms of the physical elements, but also guarded and protected him from many human passions and storms. He was not wholly indiflferent to the praise or the blame of the world, yet he could treat either with absolute contempt when it conflicted with his sense of duty or his love of truth. Although he had a very reserved and retiring disposition, yet he never failed on fit occasions to speak the sentiments of his heart, as well as the thoughts of his mind. A man of scholarly instincts and association, and a close observer of na- ture and human action, he had access to many fields of thought and enter- tainment, and thereby derived great enjoyment from life, although for many years he was a great sufferer. He possessed such dignity and independence of character, and such modesty and simplicity of manner that every one in his presence not only felt the charm of his personality, but instinctively be- lieved in the genuineness of his honesty and manhood. He was a soldier without dishonor, a farmer without guile, and a man without veneering, and we mourn his loss, but we are thankful for his example, and we hope that it will not be without influence in shaping the character of the young who knew him, and in urging us to higher aspirations in the direction of good citizen- ship and ideal living. (Signed) BURTON W. POTTER, H. H. CHAMBERLIN, WM. T. MERRIFIELD. 33 IMPRISONMENT AND ESCAPE. The close of the 15th of May, 1S64, left me, with many of my companions in arms, wounded and in the hands of the enemy. We had marched, the day before, a distance of twenty-one miles in seven hours, with but one halt, and that of only ten minutes. Now the sun had sent down his fiercest rays, now the clouds had poured their contents, in torrents, upon our devoted heads. Tired, wet through, and hungry, — for we had not a morsel to eat with us, — in the thick darkness of the overhanging woods, we laid down in line of battle upon our arms. Twice the volleys of musketry from opposing parties on our left had caused us to spring up in line; and again, we had been roused, before dawn, by our own officers, and held in readiness for any movement which might be made. Later on in the morning, we had passed hours in marching and countermarching for position, and still later had met the attack of the enemy, and after a sharp and severe fight, had been badly beaten. As the day closed, some sixty of us found ourselves stretched in and around an old barn, near the battlefield, closely guarded by Rebel soldiers. During the early hours of the evening, and well into the night, our party received accessions from such wounded Union soldiers as were able to make their way unaided ; or too severely wounded to walk, were brought in by the enemy. Occasionally, by the light of a lantern, some Rebel officer would examine us. "Are there any Confederate wounded here?" was asked by Major Meem, Medical Director on the staff of Gen. Breckenbridge, as he stood at the head of a goodly sized party of Rebel surgeons. No answer was returned by any of us, as the question was addressed to no one in particular. " I say, you d — d Yankee sons of b s, are there any Con- federate wounded here ? " "No, sir!" was the reply. "Then this is no place for us, gentlemen ! " said the Major ; and he turned away. Among the wounded was Capt. Graham of the 54th Pennsylvania. He had been shot directly through the right lung, and each breath he drew sent the air w/iistlifig through the wound, disturbing the dying, who laid near. " I wish, Major," said I to Meem, " you would give a look to this officer, before you go." "We've got enough to do to attend to the confederate wounded," said he; but spite of the remark turned to comply with the request. As he drew the shirt from the wound in the Captain's breast, he broke out with "All he wants is a d d good horn of whiskey" and walked off. All his companions followed, save one (I wish I knew and could give his name), who lingering behind, closed the wound with a piece of plaster, and gave hi m to drink from a jug in the hands of an Orderly. 34 With the morning light we were able to recognize, and enquire as to each other's condition. Another night passed, with the addition of a few more to our number, among whom was Capt. Fox of ours, from whom we learned of the death of Capt. Bacon, of our color company. Late in the afternoon of this day (Tuesday), with an armed Rebel on each side of us, Capt. Fox and myself made a slow march into town, and to the office of the Provost Marshal. Here our names and ranks were registered, and we were directed to report ourselves at the hospital. At this place our wounds were examined and partially dressed ; a thick slice of bread (the only food which either of us had had since Sunday morning) was given to each, and we were told that we might " look out for ourselves " till we were wanted. We procured lodgings at the Village hotel, where we staid till Thursday, when we were informed that we were wanted again at the hos- pital. Reporting, we found drawn up before the door of the building a long wagon, without cover, without springs, with no seat, and not even straw upon w hich to sit or lie, into which we were directed to get, as we were to be sent, in this way, to Harrisonburg, some twenty miles away. We were now joined by Lieut. Ammidon, of ours, who iiad been captured, but fortunately not wounded. Our journey was a sad and tiresome one. But it had an end; and late in the afternoon, when our teams stopped in the middle of the main street of Harrisonburg, opposite the Court House, we stepped down and out at the invitation of our guard. It was a curious co- incidence, that here, as on the battlefield, the first question asked me by the guard was the whispered otte, "Are you a Mason ? " In the light of subse- quent experience, I can't help thinking that I should have fared better, while a prisoner, if I could have answered this question in the affirmative. Here we took a sad farewell of Ammidon, who was at once hurried on further South to Andersonville and his death. We were now escorted to the hospital which was established in the buildings of the Academy, at the outskirts of the town, and reporting to the Surgeon, were by him ordered to report to the officer in charge of prisoners at the Court House. Entering, we were warmly greeted by Lieut. Walker and some forty or fifty of our own wounded men who had preceded us. We were assigned to the upper story of the building. There was the bare floor to sleep on ; no straw was furnished us. Our blankets, tin cups, canteens, indeed everything of the kind had previously been taken from us. Three times a day, coffee, bread and sheep meat, as the rebel soldiers called it, cut in cubes about two by two, were brought us. It so happened that my place on the floor, was next the door, as the room was entered. The coffee was brought in a large water pail, a small tin cup floating in it, from which we were to drink. As the bearer entered, he turned to me. FilHng the cup I put it to my lips, to take it away again with my thirst unquenched. My lips were blistered by the boiling liquid. And when, after going the rounds of the room, the soldier was at the door, on his way out, I reached again for the cup, I was met with the />/^rt.ya«/ remark, "Let that alone, you've had your chance before." And so it happ ette d aXways. We had many visitors, most of them apparently coming to see how we looked, as they exchanged no words with 35 us. Some came, however, from interest in the cause for which we suffered; or drawn by sympathy for us, on account of our wounds. Among the latter was a Mrs. Lewis, wife of a prominent merchant in the place, whose kind- ness of heart overbalanced the contempt in which she held the " myrmidons of the Tyrant Lincoln," and who furnished to many of us supplies from her own table as long as we remained in the Court House. Among the former was Col. Asa S. Gray, and his daughter, Miss Orra Gray, staunch lovers of the Union, both of them; ministering angels in our hours of despondency, of want, of suffering, and of death ! To their unwearied attention, and un- stinted supply of whatever they could procure which in any way would contribute to our welfare, all of us were indebted for comfort, and some of us for restored health and life. Dr. George H. Gilmer, a physician of the town, not only visited us, but attended to our wounds, till the arrival of Dr. Allen, assistant Surgeon on the Staff of the 34th Regiment; and in other ways did much to relieve us. Capt. McNiel, too, old Guerilla that he was, called often, and showed us much kindness, after his fashion. " Have you written home. Colonel ? " asked he one day. " Yes, Captain ! " " How did you send your letter ? " "By way of Richmond and flag of truce boat." " Pshaw ! " said he, "your folks will never hear from you by that route ! Here," said he, ' here is some paper, I see you've got pen and ink ; write a letter if you want to;— pay for a Confederate Post Office stamp,— I must make you contribute that much to our cause,— give me your word that you won't write anything you ought not to— seal it up and give it to me— and I'll put it into one oi your post offices for you, though, mind, I don't prom- ise that I won't rob it first." He was as good as his word; and, of all the letters written home by me while a prisoner, all of which were forwarded via Richmond and flag of truce boat, this one was the only one which reached its destination. Major Meem, too, called occasionally. Once, be- fore our surgeon came up, as he entered the room, I asked him if he would look at a little fellow of ours, whose wrist was terribly shattered by a Minie ball. " I suppose you want I should look at you, too ! Why the devil didn't you leave one of your own surgeons to take care of you? " said he : but the little fellow had already taken off his handkerchief, and held out his wrist, swollen, mangled, And oi a. dark, deep red color. "Erysipelas there. Major, isn't there ? " ' 'Yes." " His arm will have to be amputated, won't it?" "Yes." " Won't you operate?" " We can't be troubled with your men. Colonel ! we've got our hands full with our own," said the Major, as he turned and walked away. So life went on with us ; till, on the after- noon of the 25th, te7i days after the battle, we were gladdened by the arrival of Dr. Allen, one of our own surgeons, who had come up to take care of our wounds. Finding that we were packed too closely, he at once applied him- self to securing other and more airy, and comfortable quarters ; and having effected our removal, set about examining our wounds. The little fellow, whose wrist was so badly shattered, and whose arm Major Meem had at a later day amputated, was among the first to receive attention. Upon re- moving the bandage from the stump, the bonewas found to project three and one-half inches beyond the ''flap : " this, by actual measurement. Was this 36 accidental ? or was it in furtherance of the interest, as explained below, in the case of Ryan, whose left knee joint was shattered badly, and who now was low and sinking. " This man," said Dr. Allen to Maj. Meem, " ought to have had his leg amputated immediately after being wounded." " Yes ! " said the Major, " I thought so." "You saw him, then?" "Oh, yes!" "Well why didn't you operate?" "Oh, Doctor!" was the reply, '* you know iV sfor our interest to kill all your men we can " — and the conversation ended. After Dr. Allen's arrival, and before he had removed us to our new quarters, and while he was temporarily absent from the Court House, an ambulance was driven up, and a guard, getting out, announced that "Col. Lincoln, Capt. Fox, Capt. Graham, and Lieut. Walker would take seats in it," as they were about to be started off South. To hear was to obej'. In the effort to comply with the order, Lieut. Walker fainted, before he had reached the ground floor ; Col. Lincoln managed to get down, and part way to the ambulance ; while the two captains succeeded in reaching and taking their seats in the vehicle. At this stage in the movement. Dr. Allen made his appearance. In much excitement, he remonstrated at the cruelty of the order ; and obtained a promise of delay, till he could find the proper authorities, and remonstrate against its execution. He might as well have whistled against the wind, for all the effect he produced. The order had been issued, and would not be countermanded. Discouraged, he was re- turning, when he accidentally met Major Hunter Johnson, Acting Post Quartermaster, who hearing his representation that the removal of Col. Lincoln and Lieut. Walker would greatly endanger their lives, took the responsibility of countermanding the order, so far as those officers were concerned. He could not save the two Captains, however, and they were driven away. The days dragged their slow length along. Nothing but an occasional death varied the monotony of our life ; till one morning we were visited by a rebel officer, who asked us for owe parole. We demurred, till, upon his solemn assurance there was no Union force nearer than Cedar Creek, and at present, not the most remote possibility of our being recap, tured, we yielded, and gave the required pledge. The next day, however. Hunter, with his army, marched into town ! Before marching away, he visited the hospital — cheered us by his promise, that, upon reaching Stanton, he would send down a train with ambulances enough to take us all to Mar- tinsburg ; and left with us liberal supplies of flour, coffee, tea, sugar, &c., morphine, quinine, chloroform, stimulants and other medicines, and banda- ges sufficient for our wants. He left a large supply of all these articles for the rebel wounded, of whom there were more than two hundred in town. He left also -clothing, stockings, uniforms and boots for all our men. He had hardly gone, before the hospital was entered by a party of soldiers, headed by a man in rebel uniform, who gave his name as Capt. Jourdan of Rosser's command, and who robbed it of a// the liquors, a// the morphine, quinine, and chloroform we had; all the coffee, sugar, and tea they could carry off, each man taking one and some two suits of uniforms, and one or more pair of boots. Days passed ; and as with their passage, without the 37 appearance of the train promised by Hunter, hope of speedy liberation fled, some of our men lost courage, drooped and died ! We were denied the privilege of burying our dead in the village cemetery; and it was only by the persevering energy of iMiss Gray, that permission was given us to deposit their remains in the long disused graveyard belong- ing to the Methodist society of the town. In the absence of any better astringent, Allen sent out the nurses to cut down the only wild cherry tree we knew of ; and to dig up, and bring in the roots of blackberry bushes, of which to make tea. The Rebel authorities, who had run off at Hunter's approach, now re- turned, and resumed control. To our surprise, and indignation, we found that a guard was again stationed over us. We demanded its removal. Maj. Johnson replied that the question of the validity of our parole had been referrred to Richmond for determination. He removed the guard, till he should be informed of the decision. Meanwhile, Early came down the valley with his army ; and the guard was replaced over us. In consequence, a note was written and sent to Maj. Johnson, Acting Post Commandant, setting forth that our paroles were valid or of no binding force ; that if valid, there was neither propriety or right in keeping us under guard ; that if they were deemed invalid, we had no cause of complaint : but, that unless the guard was withdrawn, we should consider ourselves discharged from the obligations which the parole imposed. Although no reply was made to our note, the guard was continued over the hospital, and we left to draw our own inferences from such continuance. During this period, occasionally one or more of our wounded, now con- valescent, made their escape from the hospital in the village. No attempt at escape was made at our own, however^ Maj. Meem, at this time, re- appeared in the village. With his return, an effort was made to send away such of us as were well enough to bear the journey south. The means of transportation were limited, however. If the regular stage coach, from Winchester and below, came up empty, they would load in fourteen of us ; if it was filled with passengers, our party would have to wait a more con- venient season for their journey. Up to this time it had been left to Dr. Allen to determine ivho must go ; he being directed only as to the number to be sent. But now Allen announced that he had orders to send off the next day, fourteen of us ; "and. Colonel," said he, ^' you are named as one to be ready. I told Major Meem," said Allen, " that you were in no condi- tion to travel yet, and he is coming up to see you, and judge for himself" And so we were prepared when he made his appearance that morning. " Pshaw ! " said he, as he replaced my shirt, after making his examination, " Why /« //^// don't you get well, Colonel! I reckon you don't try very hard, do you ? But you'll have to go ! Don't you think now, you could take the journey if it was to your home? " "I'd try to, Major," was my reply. "Well, this is to Richmond ! " " By the way of Lynchburg? as Capt. Fox went," asked T. "How did you know anything about that?" " Oh ! I didn't dream it." "Well, get well ! " said he, " we'll let you off this time, but we can't keep you here forever, you know." " I don't want to 38 stay that long," I replied, and the subject was dropped. "By the way, Allen," he rejoined, "did you get your whiskey, to-day ? " This, in allusion to the fact, that since Rosser's captain had robbed the hospital of every thing of the kind, he (Meem) had undertaken to supply us with what was needed, " I got what you sent me. Major!" said Allen, "but its queer whiskey ! Lincoln here, had rather take his quinine clear, than in that stuff." ' Where is it ? get a tumbler, and let's try it," said the Major. He did so : not once only, but twice, and not by tasting merely, but by drinking, till he emptied one of the two bottles he had filled for our sick. He left us after a while, much to my relief, if to that of no one else. My respite was short however ; for not many days afterward, upon Allen's re- turn from the lower hospital, he again announced that he was ordered to get another party ready to be sent away, and that I was again included among those to go. As before, so now, Major Meem was to come up, in the evening, to examine my condition for himself. Allen, Lieut. Walker, and myself, were the only occupants of one of the rooms, and as the Doctor left to make up his list of those best able to bear the journey, I made known to Walker (who, poor fellow ! was on crutches and could not go) my determination of trying to escape that night. He tried to dissuade me, on the ground that, weak as I was from my wounds and long confinement, I could not possibly succeed. But I felt that if I could get beyond the guards, I could manage it some how. Of course, I placed my chief reliance upon the aid I confidently expected to receive from any negroes I should meet on my way ; and preferred the risk incurred in the attempt, to the entertainment which would be furnished me at any of the rebel prisons farther South. So I cast about for a companion, and calling Snow, of our G, to my side, made known my plans, and sent him out with some money, to hunt up the " Old Auntie " who had done our washing, and get from her some suits of clothes with which to disguise ourselves. He returned, having procured for himself, only, the suit required. While he was gone, I had enlisted another recruit, in the person of Doherty, a man of the 54th Pennsylvania. Snow was again despatched, with instructions to tell the old " mammy " what I intended to do ; and also that she must send me a suit of her " old man's " clothes ; no matter how ragged ; and get him to meet us that night, at a spot designated, to guide us on our way. I had enquired of our visitors, at different times, as carefully as possible, of the direction of the different roads in sight from the hospital ; the nature of the country, and the character and disposition of the people along each route ; and now pitched upon the road leading by Rawley Springs, through Pendleton county, to Beverly, within the Union lines, as the most safe to be taken. But we wanted a guide at any rate, till we were fairly in the mount- ains. Snow's second attempt resulted in his bringing in a complete suit of well worn Grey for Doherty : an old white hat, minus crown and part of its brim, for me ; and a promise from the old negress, that her husband should go to the rendezvous agreed upon, that night, and wait for us ; and should take with him a suit of old clothes for me to wear. So we waited with comparative composure for the appearance of Major 39 Meem. He came, at last ; bringing with him a Dr. King, also a rebel sur- geon. They examined me thoroughly, but gave no intimation of the opin- ion they reached. The Major discussed his whiskey as before ; and bctzveen drinks, indulged in reminiscences of his life, while studying his profession at the Northern colleges, and confessed to having had many a good time among the Yankees. "Do you know, Colonel, how much pleasure it would give me to dine with you at your own home ? " he asked. " How I should like, Major, to extend an invitation to you tiow^ if I could only fix upon 2i particular day,'" was my reply. " Well," said he laughing, " it does look as if there was a little difficulty about that, does n't it? " " By the way, Allen," said he, " Haven't you go\.di pair of boots for me? mine are almost gone !" "I'm afraid," said Allen, " I've none that will fit you. There are none left smaller than nines, and yoic wear" ''fives" said the Major; " but we can't be too nice about the fit ! " So Snow was directed to bring in a pair. Meem literally stepped into them, they were so large, but nevertheless was pleased ; so much so that he insisted that King should also have a pair, and Allen sent for another one, which gave equal satisfac- tion, though none the less a misfit. Still they kept their seats ! What else did they want ? I was becoming nervous : now wondering whether Snow had not been careless, and now whether the c/^ '■'■Auntie" had not been treacherous, when Meem got up, and taking me by the hand, and wishing me a pleasant journey, went away with his friend King and their new loves, the Boots. Allen now closed the hospital, and crawled between his blank- ets ; and, contrary to his usual custom, laid still, and almost instantly fell asleep. Nothing broke the quiet that settled down upon us, save an occa- sional snore from some heavy sleeper, or the measured tread of the senti- nels around the building in which we were confined. We had planned to attempt our escape at as early an hour as possible. To aid it, one of our fellows, good singer, and capital story teller that he was (he had lost a leg and could not travel), volunteered to go out by the front door, and enter- tain the guard, in the hope that the sentinels, stopping occasionally to listen would get irregular on their beats, and thus give us a chance to slip from the back of the building, between them. Another comrade, on his bunk at a back window, was to give a low whistle when the coast was clear. Close to the rear of the hospital was a small shed, which was to be the first step of our flight ; a little way beyond was a board fence, our second step; while beyond, and till we reached the cover of the cornfield, all was open to ob- servation. Well in among the growing corn was the white oak tree agreed upon as the place of rendezvous. Doherty was to try his luck first, I next, and Snow was to follow last. Warned by Alien's low and regular breath- ing that he was asleep, I got up carefully, and giving Walker's hand a hearty grasp as I passed him, left the room. My appearance was the signal for the others to set about their work. Almost instantly we heard the rich voice of our one-legged comrade, as he charmed our friends, the guards. With but little intervals the low whistle of our other friend was heard, and Doherty slipped out ! I soon followed, and with but little delay gained the rendezvous, where I found Doherty. Snow soon joined us. But there 40 was no guide ! What should we do ? Snow and Doherty in their suits of homespun gray were capitally disguised; but for myself, if once seen in our own blue, detection and capture was almost sure. Still, I was the most un- willing to remain where we were. With the directions which Dr. Gilmer (to whom late in the afternoon I had confided my intention of trying to es- cape) had given me, I felt confident of finding the house of a negro, in whom we could trust ; and, finding him, of obtaining somehow, whatever disguise was necessary for my wants. But Snow was so confident that our guide would soon make his appearance that he absolutely refused to move from the spot. So, with an injunction to him not to wait a great while, Doherty and I left him, and made our way up to a corner of the field, abutting upon a piece of wood-land, where we could better conceal our- selves. While waiting somewhat impatiently for Snow to join us, we were startled by a musket shot, from the direction of the hospital ; quickly fol- lowed by loud talking, and the sound of horses in quick gallop along the road near us. Had our escape been so soon discovered ? Why is not Snow alarmed ? and what keeps him from joining us ? were questions each asked of the other. Every minute of waiting seemed an age ; and after much urging, Doherty consented to go down, keeping covered by the fence, with a message to Snow to join us immediately. In his absence, I fancied the voices were getting nearer and nearer, and was much relieved by the hurried tread of Doherty, who came up wiih the story that beneath the tree where we had left Snow he had caught sight of from six- to eig'lii persons, who were talking loud and angrily together. I may as well say here, what I afterward learned from Snow (who, tired of waiting, attempted to find us, and failing in that, succeeded in making his way back into the hospital again, from which, at a later day, he succeeded in escaping) that the shot which so alarmed us was an accidental one, from a falling stack; that the loud talking we heard was in a detachment of Cavalry men on their way down the pike to join Early's army; and that at no time in the night, after we left, was there an} body but himself under the tree. But this we did not then know; and jumping to the conclusion that our escape had been discov- ered, and Snow already retaken, we also came to the conclusion that our only hope of final escape laid in immediate flight. So we struck across the field in a southerly direction, under cover of woods wherever practicable. Our plan was to reach the road which led, via Rawley Springs, to Beverley, in our lines; travelling by a line parallel to it, through the fields and woods, as far as possible. Dr. Gilmer, who alone of all my new made friends knew of my intention to escape, had given some general directions as to the route, and also, the names of one or two persons whom I could safely trust, provided (and there was the difficulty), I could succeed in reaching their houses. We continued our way, crossing one or two roads, which we left, because not answering the description of the one we were in search of. Morning came upon us, literally wanderers in a strange land. If we could only have found a " little cabin inhabited by a negro family, with a wheelwright's shop, by the banks of a little creek," we should have found safe hiding place, something to eat. 41 ax\6 faithful guide on our way ! ! As it was, however, we hunted for, and found some thick underbrush, under cover of which we laid down and slept. Voices, in loud conversation, woke us late in the morning ; but, satisfied that we were well screened, we took another nap ! By noon we were awake again. We now held a long consultation ; but as we did not know where we were ; as it was not safe to attempt to move while it was light ; and as we were both dry and hungry, it was thought best to get another nap, if possible. We did not wake again till near sundown ! To while away the time, Doherty cut and trimmed a good hickory stick for each of us ; while I laid still, husbanding what strength I had, for our coming night's march. My wound was very painful ; and though /suffered much from thirst, Doherty professed to want nothing but food. Each of us was supported by the hope that we should yet find the house which had been fixed upon, as our refuge, after our first night's travel (wherein dwelt our much needed guide across the mountains), and which we hoped Snow might have reached ; and when it was dusk, we left our cover, and with undiminished courage resumed our tramp, still keeping the direction of our previous night's route. We carefully felt among the stubble of a large wheat- field in our way, for any chance heads of grain with which to satisfy our hunger ; and we quarrelled with an old sow for the possession of a stagnant pool, in which she was peacefully reclining, that we might satisfy our thirst. Here we held council again. Looking south-west over the town, from our place of confinement in Harrisonburg, a solitary hill, sugar-loaf in shape, rose high above the surrounding country. From the information we had, we ought, upon looking to our rear to have seen this hill on our right, but we did see it on our left ; and we were forced to the conclusion, that, by some mistake, we had crossed the road which led to the Springs. It had been represented as widely laid out, thrown up in turnpike-sJiape, and pretty well travelled. So, taking another drink {it didn't taste so well this time), we turned our faces northward, and kept on till we came to a road, which, in the belief that it was the one we sought, we followed for a while under some of the pines by its side. This seemed to run out into a mere wood's path, when we left it, and keeping still more to the north, across the fields, soon came out into another road, along which we kept till morning light warned us to take to the mountains, and hide. Hunger and thirst, and anxiety as to our whereabouts prevented sleep ; and crawling beneath the shelter of some thick underbrush, we spent the day in watching the farm- houses which dotted the plain below, in hopes of catching sight of some ''contraband." At times, we speculated as to what had become of Snow, and what effect our escape had had on the fate of our comrades left at Har- risonburg. The sight of Rebel Cavalrymen near, riding from house to house below us, and holding short colloquy with the inmates of each, did not add to our peace. Our day watch came to an end at last ; and at dusk, flanking the houses at our feet, we descended the mountain for the purpose of obtaining food, and, if possible, information as to our whereabouts. Our watch of the day had shown us that the house near by had no inmates, save 42 the aged and gray-headed couple, who had responded to the calls of the Rebel horsemen during the day. Of course, dressed as I was in my own proper uniform, save that a private's blouse had been substituted for the regulation coat ; with my arm confined, and useless, by reason of my wound, it was not prudent for me to show myself. So Doherty left me seated with my back to a stone wall, and went up to the house alone. He soon rejoined me, having in one hand a pitcher of milk, and in the other two slices of bread, which we attacked without ceremony. The old man had followed Doherty, unperceived ; and now, while we were eating, reached over the wall and placed his hands on my shoulder. "Who are you? Where do you come from? Where are you going? and what are you doing here, at this time of night," he asked. Too many questions to answer at once ; so he was told merely that we were Conscripts, on ourway to report at Harrisonburg, to the Rebel commandant. There had been a late conscription ; and all conscripts had been ordered to report the day a//^r we left. "You ought to have reported yesterday." " Yes ! but we lost our way in crossing the mountains !" "Where did you come from?" "Moorfield." " How did you pass the picket at Brock's Gapf^ "We wa n't challenged !" "That's strange !" There was a good deal of like questioning and answer ; the result of it being to give us the information that we were on the road to '^^ Brock's Gap," instead of " Rawley Springs," and that we were only ni7te miles from Harrisonburg. Having eaten our supper, we rose and followed the man as far as his house, on the zvay to Harrisonburg. Here we exchanged with him a pleasant good night, and continued our way in apparent unconcern. But, so soon as we were fairly screened from his observation, we retraced our steps. Having repassed his house, we sat down to discuss our situation. Here we were, on a road we knew to be a very dangerous one, for McNeil's company was at "Moorfield," and parties of his men were continually passing between that place and Harrisonburg. Besides, while prisoners, in conversation with our guards, as well as those well disposed toward us, we had learned that in many respects an unsafe road to take. Still I could not make up my mind to turn back in search of another route. My feet were already very sore and inflamed, and I dreaded any increase of travel. At length, with much difficulty, I persuaded Doherty it was best to keep on. It was nearly morning when we neared the entrance to the Gap. We were walking after the fashion of the country, Doherty leading a few paces, when, at a turn in the road, I caught sight of the light of a picket fire, which Doherty had not seemed to notice. My low whistle, or the snapping of a twig, upon which Doherty had incautiously stepped, attracted atten- tion ; and a sharp " who goes there ?" followed. We each threw ourselves upon the ground, close to the bushes which lined the road, and after a little delay, crawled through the brush to the river bank (the Shenandoah), plunged into the water, which we forded somehow ; and, climbing the mountain, hid in a thick clump of evergreens. Here we passed the next day undisturbed. Heavy clouds gathered in the afternoon sky, but we started at dusk, in spite of the rain which had begun to fall. At the foot of 43 the mountain, we found a creek running across our way. We forded it safely, carefully feeling the way with our canes, and sat down on its bank to empty the water from our boots, and wring it out of our stockings. We had not finished, when the tread of horses' feet, and rattling of sabres, warned us of near danger. How my heart beat, as the foremost rider pulled up his horse (a step farther and he would have been actually upon me) to settle with his companion the dispute between them, whether or not they were at the Ford. Fortunately for us they concluded that it was at a point lower down the creek, and reining round their horses, they rode away. Of course we moved as soon as they were fairly off ; and after a little waiting, everything being still, put on our boots, and walked away. But a new trouble met us soon after. We came to where the road forked. In the darkness of the night we could hardly see a hand before us ; so, kneel- ing, we tried, by careful feeling of the road, to ascertain which was the most travelled, meaning to take it. But we could not satisfy ourselves, and con- cluded to hide again and wait for the morning. So we climbed the mountain, and laid down to rest and sleep. It was late when we woke, cold and stiff, and of course wet through, for it was raining hard, as it had all the night long. All day we watched the roads in sight, hoping that some of McNeil's men would pass, and so we be able to select our route ; for we had now determined to make for " Romney " and "Moorfield," and our lines at "Cumberland." Late in the afternoon, it having cleared away, we de- scended the mountain part way, and hid in a thick clump of laurel bushes, almost directly over the road. After long waiting and watching, we caught sight of two Rebel soldiers, slowly riding toward Harrisonburg ; and as they passed, heard : "Well, they can't be on this road, for the Colonel was never out of the hospital till the night he got away ; and he could not have travelled so far;" and recognized in one of the party, a soldier who had been guard over us for weeks. We knew now that we had been pursued ; and that our pursuers, on this road, unable to hear an>-thing of us in advance, were returning, satisfied that we must have taken some other route. Of course we felt greatly relieved at what we had just seen and heard ; and waited, with a good deal of impatience, for the coming on of evening, that we might resume our journey. At near dusk we picked our way to the foot of the mountain, and soon after started. Our road wound up and round the side of the mountain; it was narrow, bordered on each side by tall trees growing thickly together, which made it pretty dark ; and we trudged along with a good degree of confidence, greatly relieved by the knowledge that we were no longer being pursued. Once or twice, we stopped to consult at a divergent path, but were not tempted to wander from our better travelled road. Hour» had passed, and we were still climbing ; the road had been gradually getting worse and worse ; we occasionally stumbling over projecting roots and stumps ; when, all at once, we stood on the summit of the mountain, face to face with the newly risen moon ! It should have been at our backs ! How had we gone astray ? and how far from our true route had we been led ? Alas ! there was no opportunity^ to enquire, if enquirj' would have 44 been safe ; and with feelings a good deal depressed, we turned to retrace our steps, carefully examining the way, as we walked on, to determine, if possible, at what point we had wandered. Morning broke upon us, while still upon our backward way ; and we went into the woods for concealment, a good deal dispirited. We were roused from sleep by the crowing of cocks, and the barking of dogs, in the door-yard of a house not far away, and which had been unnoticed before. The clear notes of a bugle, sounding the reveille, drew our attention to a party of Rebel horsemen in another direction, who were engaged grooming their " cattle." We were almost in "the open,'" so far as this party was concerned; and, digging our heels into the ground, slowly but carefully worked ourselves, upon our backs, under cover. We watched anxiously the departure of these soldiers ; and, relieved by their riding away, were amused later in the day, by observing the females and children of the family near us, as, with straight poles for flails, they kept hard at work pounding out their crop of wheat. Way off, in Another direction, by itself, and apparently in the middle of a large field of grain, was a small, one-story house, at which we determined we would apply for food, when night should come. We felt gloomy enough ! My own condition called for all the nerve I was possessed of. My wound, from want of attention, was extremely painful, and besides, my feet were so badly swollen, and blistered, that I could hardly walk. In addition, I was weak from want of food, and suffering for water. Doherty, not having been wounded, was in better condition ; still he suffered a good deal. Notwithstanding all this, we started as soon as it was dark ; and going up to the house, Doherty obtained a couple of slices of bread, well covered with apple butter, and, what he did not want so much, the company of the owner of the place, out to where I was seated. Of course it was natural that we should be questioned, and perhaps equally natural that we should not tell all the truth, or nothing but the truth. Again we passed ourselves off as Rebel soldiers, this time as returning from fur- lough ; and were not a little startled to find that we had been on the road to Franklin County. Professing to belong to Imboden's command, our friend kindly undertook to pilot us across the country, to a road which led to Winchester, where Imboden was. We followed him until we reached a road, which he assured us led directly to Winchester ; thanked him for his kindness, and paid him for his bread, and left him. Now here was a dilem- ma ! If we did not want to go to " Franklin," neither did we wish to go to Winchester, which we had good reason to believe must now be occupied by Early and his army. Still, in the uncertainty of being able to find the road from which we had strayed in some unaccountable manner, it seemed the best course to keep on. By keeping to the mountains, we believed we could avoid all the Rebel pickets ; and there would be but little more danger in taking this route, than the one by ' ' Romney . ' ' True, if retaken, we should fare better at the hands of McNeil than in the keeping of Mosby or Harry Gil- mor. Besides, the distance to Martinsburg was less than to any point in our lines by way of Romney. So we accepted our new situation with comparative cheerfulness. Once 45 in the course of the night, we were brought to a stand-still, by the apparent runnirtg out of the road, in the thick brush, at what appeared to be the bed of a mountain brook, now completely dried. On our hands and knees we felt (for in the darkness we could see nothing) for the foot marks of horses, or fresh horse dung, which would be a guide. But we failed to find either ; and after long hunting, came into a footpath, which gradually widened out and gave us a way of escape from the difficulty which threatened us. Warned by the coming daylight, we again hid on the mountain. After a sound sleep, we woke, and cautiously made our way through the woods to a point from which we could plainly see what was going on in a farm house beneath. We were interested in watching the Rebel soldiers, who occasionally stopped on their way to chat with the young girls of the family, and in endeavoring to hear what was said. We heard enough to satisfy us that there had been a late battle between the two armies in the valley ; but not enough to learn at what place it was fought, or which party were victors. Early in the afternoon, Doherty announced his determination of going to the house for food. Although we could plainly enough see that there were no males about the house, I tried to dissuade him from venturing — at any rate, while it was daylight ; but he declared he should die unless he had something to eat, and off he started. I was relieved at seeing him reach the house, make known his wants (as I well knew by seeing one of the girls go to the "spring house"), and leave with some bread in his hands. But I was equally disturbed when, as soon as he was fairly away, one of the girls sounded a conch, and I saw a man, who was cradling oats in a field not far off, start on a run for the house. Hurrying to meet Doherty, we climbed the mountain, flanked the house, and, keeping under cover of the woods, continued our flight, till warned by the setting of the sun of the danger ot again losing our way. Seating ourselves, each discussed his shigle slice of bread. Now, Doherty found leisure to tell the cause of his rapid retreat from the house. He had asked for a larger allowance of bread than was first given him ; and while incautiously asking his way, and the distance to Winchester, one of the girls accused him of being a runaway prisoner from Harrisonburg, and, in his confusion, he left without waiting for the additional supply he had asked for. But he learned that the road we had been travelling did not lead to Winchester. So we had lost our way again I Nothing daunted, however, we started as soon as it was dark. Morning saw us once more in hiding, with no house in sight. We slept pretty much through the day, and were on our road again as soon at it was prudent to travel. It had now become very hard work for me to walk. Not only were the soles of my feet badly blistered, but the toes were much swollen and festered, and the nails of some of them had come off; so that, when day began to break, warning us to seek a hiding place, I felt really unable to climb so far as prudence dic- tated ; and, entirely exhausted, threw myself down alongside a fallen tree, in some underbrush, not half way up the mountain side. The violent bark- ing of a hound which had found us out disturbed us. How mad I was as the whelp stood there, with glaring eyes and standing hair, regarding none of 46 my coaxings ! The voices of children crying out " Watch 'em, Brave ! " — the speculation as to what "Brave" had found, and the promise of the father, that, after breakfast they would go up and see, admonished us of our imprudence. But flight, at the moment, would only make matters worse ; so we laid quiet, in hope that " Brave " would soon tire of his barking watch — as he did. When his yelping ceased, we rose, hurried to another part of the mountain, and, with a prayer for safety, laid down, and, after a while, slept soundly. In this manner, travelling by night, hiding by day, avoiding every house, except when driven to one by the pangs of hunger, we made our way for eleven successive nights ; ojice becoming so hopelessly lost as to feel compelled, by very despair, to rouse the inmates of a farmhouse, to get directions as to our route. Fortunately, here again, the only occupants of the dwelling were aged people. The suspicion of the old man, who, in answer to our request, good-naturedly got up from his bed to put us on our way, was allayed by our telling him that we belonged to McNeil's command, and were in a hurry to get to Moorefield, as we had overstayed our leave of absence. "Then you don't want to go to Moorefield," said he, " for McNeil moved to Romney, yesterday." " It's McNeil, and not Moorefield or Rom- ney that we are after," said we ; and, changing his direction, the old fellow led us through the bushes, and putting us on a road, which he said led to Romney, forty miles distant, left us with a hearty wish for our success. Our situation was thus much bettered. We not only knew where we were, but the distance between us and our lines at "Clear Spring," for which place we now determined to aim ; but had the more important information that McNeil was directly in our path. Our progress had been, and still must nec- essarily be, slow ; owing not only to my feeble condition, but also because the weather was intensely hot, and, owing to the drought, water seldom to be met with ; and it was dangerous to ask for food. We had depended up- on finding berries in plenty, and running across a contraband occasionally ; but we had seen neither during any part of our journey. As for water, there was almost literally none. The bed of every stream was dry ; and we came across no springs. Never shall I forget my feelings at seeing, one night, by the faint light of a just rising moon, the glimmer of water a short distance ahead of us ! We made short work of reaching it, and driving out a hog, which had made his bed in it ! Sitting down, Doherty filled our canteen. It had been two nights and tzvo days since either of us had had a drop to drink.' I emptied the canteen at a draught ! and Doherty, after filling it again, did the same ! We sat awhile to rest and cool ourselves, for the night was exceedingly hot. Before starting, we thought best to take another drink ; but now both taste and smell were sickening ! Neither of us could swallow a drop ! But we filled the canteen, lest we should find no more, and started again. I am amused now, as I recall the calculations we made of our probable progress. Three nights more, and we should be safe be- neath the " old flag " ! The 54th Penn. had been stationed in the neighbor- hood of " Romney ; " and Doherty claimed to know every cross-road and mountain path between that place and Clear Spring. Alas ! ho'v vain all our calculations proved ! On our next night's travel we came to a fork of the 47 road which puzzled us. After reconnoitering a house near by, and finding it occupied by women only, we enquired of them, and learned that we were but eighteen miles from " Romney " by either road ; and that there was lit- tle choice between the two. Our route led up over the range which divided two valleys. The way was steep, and the latter part of it rough and uneven. I had been for some time anxious to stop for the night ; when suddenly the loud baying of hounds warned us of our nearness to some house, and a step or two opened into a clearing, and showed us plainly to the gaze of its owner, standing at the just opened door of his cabin. It would only excite suspicion to retreat ; so we boldly announced our desire to join McNeil at Romney, expressing a fear that we had lost our true road. Sure enough, we had. The old man kindly gave us directions by which to regain our route, and, following them, we soon got out of his sight, when we took to the woods for concealment. It had been cloudy, which, perhaps, was one cause of our going astray. At night we were again on the road, taking now the right, now the left hand path ; and in the morning laid ourselves down beside a fence in a thick piece of woods which bordered upon the roadside. A dense fog laid heavily up- on the land, and hid from us a house standing but a short distance from our resting place. We were both so nearly exhausted, and our feet were so sore from repeated blisters, that we took no more steps than we felt to be abso- lutely necessary. Still, had not the fog so completely hid the house, we should not have dared to have laid down where we did. We had not slept, when we were roused by the dropping of a set of bars,— the passing by of some cows,— and a good-natured voice asking us what we were doing there. It was the same class of man we had encountered twice before— old, gray-headed, long past his prime. There seemed to be no others in this country ! He was a Philadelphia lawyer for questions, some of which were hard to be evaded. Our old story, that we were McNeil's men, anxious to rejoin him, and travelling at night because we had overstayed our time of absence, seemed to satisfy him. He insisted upon our going to his house with him, which we did, thinking on the whole that it would be safer to do so than to refuse. Seeing how difficult it was for us to walk, he became suspicious again at my explanation of blistered feet. "Why, you soldiers ought to be toughened to it," said he. "You forget that we are mounted soldiers," said I. "That's so," said he. We each got a slice of bread of the old fellow, and learned that we had again lost our way, being now hven- fy-six miles from Romney, instead of eighteen, as two nights before. I am ashamed to say that I stole from the house a piece of bar soap, as a dressing for my sore and inflamed feet. I would have bought it ; but I had nothing but greenbacks, and was afraid to show them. Leaving the old man and his aged partner, we took to the road again, and, as soon as hidden by the fog, took to the cover of the heavy timber. Never could an> thing afford greater relief than this soap gave, spread in thick slices over the raw spots on my feet ! I slept nearly all day. At night we got along with no accident ; and by morning came out on the pike lead- ing from Winchester to Romney, about Jive miles from the latter place. 48 Here we begged a drink from a young girl who was milking by the road- side, and turned to the hill again for hiding. The day was spent in speculating as to the probable presence of McNeil at Romney ; the danger of being seen by any of his scouting parties, or of falling upon any of his pickets ; and my ability, if not interrupted, of walk- ing the distance remaining before us during the coming night. Doherty repeated, over and over again, the fact of his intimate acquaintance with the surrounding country, and his perfect knowledge of all the mountain paths and roads in the neighborhood. So that at night we started with increased confidence of success. We travelled slowly, and with great care ; stopping frequently to listen for any noise which would indicate the approach of any party, and to peer through the darkness for the faintest glimpse of any picket fire. We had no cause for alarm till we came in sight of Romney ; but it seemed as if every house in that village was lighted up ; and, after a moment for consultation, Doherty led the way across the fields, leaving the town well to the left— I following as fast as my crippled condition would allow. Each of us had many, but no serious falls, in this cross cut over the uneven country. We struck the road again about a mile and a half north and east of the town. It was necessary to do this ; because, directly ahead, ran the south branch of the Potomac, which we must cross on the bridge which spanned it there, or be compelled to keep along the mountain, for, we did not know how many more, days and nights. It was a night " as dark as Egypt," and we were tramping along. Doherty leading and I following as fast as I was able, when suddenly, from the dark- ness ahead, came the startling " halt ! who comes there ? " Before I could get up and interpose, Doherty answered "refugees." But to the next question I answered, giving my Christian and omitting my surname, as, on the whole, somewhat dangerous. To all the other questions, I answered with just the least grahi of truth, drawing from the sentinel the somewhat doubtful "Well ! I suppose it is all right, isn't it?'' and in a confident tone my own " Yes, you d d fool, do you suppose we should be here, with McNeil just in front, if it wasn't?" The sentinel (for such he was) made some reply, but in a tone of voice too low to be heard plainly. " LeVs run'^ said Doherty. "No," said I ; "he'll alarm the camp if we do; and there will be an end of me, if not of both of us." The sentinel's cross "what are you standing there for? are you going to keep me here all night?" admonished us. and we started towards him. It was too dark to enable either of us to see the other with any distinctness. Evidently, however, our new friend had some misgivings ; for he joined us as we came up, and walked some distance, questioning us somewhat closely, particularly as to where we came from, and where going. As he left us to go back to his post, a most unaccountable noise, on our left, gave us new alarm ; and it took some time and careful examinalion before we could determine that it came from a body of horses champing their rations of whole corn. A good deal relieved by this discovery, we came to the conclusion that the party had bivouacked in the woods, leaving a sentinel only on the road ; and that we had successfully passed all danger. Doherty still wanted to take to the 49 fields and run ; but I wouldn't, for I couldn't ; so we continued on the high- way. A few steps brought us to a sharp turn of the road, where was a col- lection of long low buildings ; among them a large barn. As we made the turn the scene which broke suddenly upon us, sent the blood curdling to our hearts, and almost completely paralyzed us. Directly in our front was a large mansion, brilliantly lighted from ground floor to garret, filled with a merry party of both sexes, enjoying themselves with music and dancing, while in the grounds around, groups of rebel soldiers, gathered about their camp fires, were bthily engaged in cooking. Fortunately for us, we had not passed from the shade of the barn ; and still more fortunately, the water, at some previous rains, had worn a gully across the road, at the very spot where our flight had been thus arrested. Instinctively we threw ourselves upon the ground, hardly daring to breathe, fearing each moment that we might be discovered. The sentinel who had allowed us to pass, now rode by, and asked of one of his comrades if he had "seen anything of two strange men." "I hain't seen nobody," was the reply. "Is that you, Bill?" was asked in turn. "Yes !" "Well, you'd better go back to your post, for if the old man finds out you've left it, you'll catch hell 1" "Well, I don't know as I done right in letting them pass!" "No matter; they can't get out if they have got in;" and, comforted by this assurance, our friend rode back to his post. Soon the order to " fall in for supper" drew the whole party round the fires ; and under cover of the darkness, caused by this movement, we crawled on our hands and knees across the road, in the gully in which we had been concealed, to what we thought a safe distance up the mountain side. We laid there a long while, listening anxiously for each sound from the party below. At length there was a lull in the music ; a heavy tread on the piazza floor, and a voice, which was recognized at once as McNeiPs, called "Sergeant Allen." "Aye, aye, Sir," responded the Sergeant. "Wake up Lieuts. Bradshaw and Scott, and then saddle. There were a few moments busy preparation ; and then the same voice, with these preliminary words, "half-past four is the time, boys," gave the order to "march." It seemed an age after the command filed away, before all was quiet in and around the house. During all the time, no persons ever hugged the groimd with a closer embrace than we did. The noise of closing doors at length satisfied us that everybody had left. We raised ourselves to a sitting position, and, " luhich way did they gof' was asked by each of the other at the same time. One knew no more than the other ; and in this uncertainty neither of us cared to move. Three miles ahead, upon our projected route, was a wire suspension bridge across the south branch of the Potomac ; and McNeil, as we well knew, whichever way he went, was too wary a soldier to leave that unpicketed. There was nothing left for us but, abandoning all hope of escape that night, to take to the mountains again for safety. So we did ; and made our bed in earthworks thrown up in the first year of the war. Here we enjoyed a sound sleep. At daybreak, Doherty, looking out upon the valley below us, informed me that the large brick building at our feet, where the " sound of revelry by night" had so startltd us, was upon an estate owned by a Mr. Inskip, a 50 well-known rebel. " I know," said he, "every path across these mountains ; have taken them thousands of times on my way to and from picket. There is a house a little way off, where we can get a good, square meal. I have had many a one in it, and I want to get on to ' Hangitig Rock ' (so called from its projecting part way over the pike beneath it) while it is light, and see if there is any picket on the bridge." I acknowledged that these were all good reasons, but still I told him I would not move ; it was dangerous enough at night, as our last night's experience proved ; it would be much more so in the day ; and besides, after getting safely so far, I should feel ashamed enough to be caught, as it were, within sight of home. And to convince him that I was in earnest, I stretched myself out for another nap. When I awoke, Doherty resumed the subject, and after hesitating long, I consented to start. The movement came near being a fatal one for us, however ; for all at once, without anything to give us warning, we came out upon a clearing wh^re young men — the only ones we had seen on our whole tramp — were engaged in mowing. As we came out from the woods, they caught sight of us, and dropping their scythes, made for their horses, which, saddled, were hitched to the fence. We dodged back to the protection of the woods, and bending to the right, hurried away as fast as we could. Whether they searched for us or not we could not tell. We kept on with all the speed we could muster, till in making our way down a mountain, we came to a deep gully, bordered on each side by high blackberry bushes, at the bottom of which ran a stream of beautifully clear water. We had now been out thirteen days, and had had but six slices of bread (each) to eat ; and we had suffered more than I can tell for want of water. So we gave ourselves up to this indulgence ; eat and drank, and drank and eat, till we could hold no more. With a parting sip, we turned away, having first filled our "canteen." We were now making our last climb before coming to "Hanging Rock." "I thought you told me that there was but one or two houses about here," said I to Doherty. "So I did," said he. "What's all this noise then, of driving cattle?" asked I. He could not tell, and we made our way more slowly, and with greater caution. Just before sundown we reached the top of the mountain, made our way carefully to " Hanging Rock," from which we were to get a sight of the bridge, and, to our dismay saw that the flats near it, on both sides of the river, were filled with cattle, horses, and wagons, all within a line of Rebel sentinels. Evidently our situation was not a safe one : and we started at once in search of a secure hiding place, and, deeming ourselves safe from observation, laid down among some bushes. Hardly had we done so, when our attention was attracted by the sound of voices, and the tread of a picket guard, as it passed on its way to some point in our rear, higher up the mountain. It marched past so near, and we saw them so distinctly, it seemed impossible they should not see us. But, thank God ! they did not discover us ! So, soon as they were out of hearing, crawling close to the ground, and stepping with the utmost care, we descended the mountain, and squeezed ourselves in between some huge rocks, whose sides rose far above our heads. From here we could catch a glimpse of the soldiers on 51 the opposite side of the river, and could plainly hear what was said by those who passed on the road beneath us. In this way we learned that the party was McNeil's; which, having made a raid on "Oldtown," in Maryland, the night before, was now returning with their plunder. Feehng that we were safe, we moved the loose stones which interfered with our comfort, and resting our backs against the rocks, which hid us from observation, gave ourselves to sleep. Morning dawned, and showed us that this party was still encamped. Towards noon all had gone, save a party (a picket, probably) , who, although not visible, we could hear conversing beneath us. Nothing disturbed us during the day or night. We were awakened the next morning by the sound of distant cannonading, which fell faintly but with perfect distinctness upon our ears. Doherty, who alone, from his service in this region, might have made something of it, could not locate it. Before long, a small party of Rebel Cavalry came in sight. Soon a larger party appeared, wounded men in carriages, supporting each other, or held up by comrades apparently unwounded, army wagons, pieces of artillery, ambulances, caissons, all mingled in confusion, and a party of mounted Infantry, each man having a large bundle of straw strapped behind him, and all urging their animals to a speed unusual on a march. What did it all mean ? The sound of the cannonading, and the sight of the wounded men, plainly enough indicated that the party had been engaged. Which party was victorious was a matter of more concern to us ; and we strained our ears to catch, if possible, some word which would relieve our anxiety. At length the voice of some one urging his horse along the road and past the confused mass, enquiring "Where's the General? Where's McCausland?" gave us a knowledge of whose the command was. The anxious enquiry by one, of "Where do you suppose Averill is ?" was met by the taunting reply, " Don't you fret ; you'll see him as soon as you want to !" The question by one, "Where do you suppose McNeil is?" was answered by another, who gave the confident assurance that " He promised he would tear up the railroad, and he never yet had disappointed them." All these things, and many others, were full of interest to us, but did little to relieve our anxiety. The column had passed by, and the perfect silence below and above us was leading to the belief that the pickets had been witdrawn, when the rapid tread, on the pike below, of a horse coming from the direction of Romney ; the sharp question, "Where are you going, Major?" and the reply, "Over to the other Brigade," drove from the minds ot each ol us all thoughts of further travel that night. We had learned at Harrisonburg, on the march of the Rebel army down the Valley, that McCausland was brigaded with Bradley Johnson ; and now the inference was irresistible that the "other Brigade " was Johnson's— probably at Springfield, across the river. So another night's confinement was before us, and still longer acute suff-ering (for such it had now become) from hunger and thirst. With the early morning the rear guard of this force marched awav, and all became silent as death. This silence was so long and unbroken, that Doherty urged our leaving at once. I refused to stir. " Look down there. Colonel," said he, pointing to a house 52 on the flat below us ; "I have eaten many a good meal at that house, and / shall die if I don't get something to eat right away. Come, now ! We can't either of us stand this longer ! Let's start !" But I refused, and urged him strongly to bear our condition till evening. It was to no purpose, however ; and with a promise on his part to be very careful in making his way out from our hiding place, we shook hands, and, with a wish for mutual success, parted. Left thus alone, I was wondering whether I had not been foolish to consent to the separation, when Doherty's hurried return roused me. He had, while still within the protection of the woods, caught sight of the glimmer of the bayonets of a picket on the mountain. He zvas n" t now so hungry as he had been! and, if only he had not been seen, was willing to stay in hiding as long as I pleased. We remained closely hid all day, nothing occurring which gave us any uneasiness. Late in the afternoon, a horseman jogged along below us, unchallenged. In the belief that our way was now clear, we crept from our hiding place, and cautiously made our way down the mountain, and skirted its base till we reached a point opposite the bridge. There was no picket stationed at it. But what seemed worse was the fact that its suspension wires had been thrown off their supporting piers, 07i one side ; and it was hanging by the strands of the wire ropes of one side alone. It didn't seem possible to cross it, if we waited for night, if, indeed, we could pass it any- how ; and in very desperation we determined to attempt the matter at once. Our footing was the railing on the side of the bridge. Steadying ourselves as well as we could, by grasping the connecting stay rods, we did cross.* (I could not have done it with my one serviceable arm, had not Doherty helped me.) Almost immediately we came full upon a party of men, by the side of the road, whose nods and whisperings alarmed us much. There was nothing for us but to march by as unconcernedly as possible, and, once out of their sight, to take to the woods and hide again. It was near morn- ing when we started again ; and having succeeded in flanking Springfield, turned away for our last rest before reaching our lines. We were now nearing a new danger. The old soldiers, who had been detailed to guard the bridges and stations along the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, had been drawn off by Sigel and Hunter, for their expedition up the Valley, and their places had been filled by the loo days men, as they were called, who were neither well drilled or disciplined. There was danger, on approaching the outposts at any of these stations, after dark, lest the sentinel, in the nervousness springing from his inexperience, shouldy?;-^ before he challenged. So, in view of this danger, we started early in the afternoon, kept the cover of the woods for a while, and when within two or three miles of our journey's end, came out upon the pike, which we boldly followed. No sign of life disturbed us as we limped along. We reached the smouldering fires and smoking ruins which marked where a railroad station had been, unchallenged. One house only of the little village was standing, at the door of which stood two females exulting over the destruction. An applica- tion for admittance to the house, and for food, was denied ; and we turned away, to cross the Potomac into "Oldtown," Maryland. The foot bridge 53 had been also destroyed ; and Doherty led the way to the " ford " below. We entered the water, which sent a chill through our bodies. The stream was swift, and it was with great difficulty that we made way against the force of the current. The crossing made, we sat down on the bank, to wring the water from our clothes. That done, we set out for the village. " Halt, there !" sang out a long-legged fellow, dressed in the uniform of our cavalry, and who came out of a house near by, and made his way to us. But we did not care to stop ; and he soon overtook us. " Where are you going?" he asked. " Up to a tavern, if there is any here," was answered, and he led the way. It was quite dark ; so that, unnoticed by us, quite a crowd followed on after. Just as we reached the door of the hotel, the old landlady was about shutting up for the night. Our civil request to be furnished with supper brought the ungracious response "that we could not have any." "Why not, my dear Madame ?" " It's too late to be cooking supper for anybody, to-night," " You can give us some bread and milk, can't you ? we are very hungry." "No." "Why not?" " That d d McNeil has driven away all my cows." "Well, you can give us some bread and butter, surely!" "Yes; I suppose I can do that," and off she went on the errand. The crowd which had followed us, now pressed round, clamorous to know our names and business, and destination, and where we came from ; to but few of which questions were any direct replies made. Matters were fast getting unpleasant for us, when the old lady announced that our supper was ready. We ate it without ceremony ; and almost stifled by the closeness of the room (every window being shut down) and unsuspicious of any pending trouble, stepped to the door for a breath of fresh air. A crowd of some eighty to one hundred people stood crowding around the door, and shouts of "make them atiswer,^' greeted us as we made our appearance. A little bantam ot a fellow, with a musket almost as large as he was, touching me on the shoulder, demanded to be informed who we were, etc. "Friends," I an- swered. " But that won't do," he said. "Where did you come from?" " Romney." " Where are you going ?" " Martinsburg," — (most unfortunate answer, for Early held the place, a fact which at the time was unknown to us). "What do you want there?" "That's none of your business ;" and thereupon the crowd shouted, "They are spies, take them to the guard house !" It was getting serious ; and I offered, if there was a decent man among them, who would come into the house and listen, that I would tell our story, and satisfy him that there was nothing to fear from us ; but that I would not talk to the crowd around. So a spruce, gentlemanly-looking man was pushed to the front, who led the way into a side room, wherein lay a wounded Rebel officer, victim of the little affair of the Tuesday before, the cannonading from which had awakened us in our retreat. To this man, I told, without reservation, the whole history of our escape, and everything connected with it ; and I confess was indignant when I concluded, to hear him say "that he reckoned it was all right, but he was peculiarly situated, and he didn't think he could satisfy the people outside. " Of course, nothing more could be done on our part, and so we followed him to the door. He 54 did nothing to try and relieve us ; and again my little friend with the musket ordered us to go with him to the guard house. We still refused ; and some one in the crowd sang out, " IV/iere's Thresher? send for Thresher!" A short, thick-set man soon made his appearance, to whom I gave our history as before, and from whom I received a hearty grasp of the hand, and an assurance that he would set all right. He did so in a few words, and the crowd at once dispersed. It was now past one o'clock, and I turned to the landlady with a request for a bed. " You can't sleep in this house, to-night," she said. "Why, what's the matter, now?" I asked. "Why, McNeil may come back to-night ; and if he should, and you were in the house, you could not get away so easily," was her answer. " Well, come Doherty, it's only one night more ; let us be off!" But as I turned, this Mr. Thresher an- nounced his intention of going into the woods with us. Waiting for him to go after a covering, we followed as he led the way into the mountains, where already some twenty of the citizens of the place, afraid to remain at their homes, were soundly sleeping. A dense fog had settled down upon the earth. We lay and shivered, but could not sleep ; and at* the early dawn, made our way to the tavern which had been so inhospitably closed against us the night before. Here, at breakfast, we met Capt Squires, of the Virginia Cavalry, down from Cumberland, in command of a small scouting party. We learned from him the situation of affairs in the valley, and by his advice concluded to make our way to Cumberland. It was nineteen miles there, and neither of us were in a condition to walk any farther. But horses were not to be obtained for love or mofiey. All that McNeil had not robbed these people of had been driven into the mountains for safety. We must walk or stay where we were. So taking directions from Capt. Squires, we got on to the tow path of the canal, and started. It wanted a few min- utes of seven o'clock when we set forth. Nobody can imagine how we suffered, as we struggled on in this, our first exposure for months to the rays of the sun. At half-past two we were at the mouth of Patterson's Creek, only seven miles from our starting place, and looking across the river, caught sight of a repair party at work upon a partially burned railroad bridge ; and what seemed better, something which we took to be a locomo- tive engine. So, spite of the shouts and gestures of the working party, who watched us narrowly, we plunged into the river, and after many tumbles and much trouble, succeeded in crossing. Our friends had been endeavor- ing to make us understand, by their gestures, etc., that the river was i ot fordable ; but we could not hear what was said, till it seemed easier to keep on than to return. As we came up from the river, faint and exhausted, our appearance attracted the attention of three gentlemen who were enjoying the shade of some large trees at the station house. I had called a young boy to me, and sent him off to get us some milk. At his departure one of these gentlemen came up to where we were sitting, with the remark, "You are pretty well played out, I see; how far have you been travelling?" "From Oldtown." " That would not have worn you so!" "The sun is dreadfully hot, and we are n't used to it." Eyeing us still more sharply— " You are soldiers !" he said. " Well, that's a good one," said I. "Oh, you need not deny it ; I can see that plainly enough ! But you need not be 55 afraid of me, if you are in Virginia. My name is Everett. I'm a cousin ol Edward Everett, who was Governor of Massachusetts ; you've heard of him, I reckon, and I am a thorough-going Union man. You want to go to Cum- berland? Well, come up to my house, eat dinner with me, and to-night, when the engine comes down to take back these men here, I'll get a place for you on the train." I met this frank speech with equal plainness, and told him our story. As we were on the way to his house, we met the boy (his son) with a pitcher of milk. " Don't drink that now," said he, "wait and have some whiskey first, and then, with your dinner, you may have all the milk you want. That's my advice as a medical man." And so we went to his house, drank his whiskey, ate his dinner, took his milk, and engaged in conversation till the noiseof the engine warned us it was time to separate. Accompanying us to the train, he helped us on board, shook hands as he bid us good-bye, with a wish for our success, and we steamed away. Reaching Cumberland, I reported at Department Headquarters. " How are you, Colonel ? how did you get here ? and where, in heaven's name, have you been?" exclaimed Gen. Kelley, as, jumping from his seat, he grasped my hand. " I heard of you, long ago, as having escaped ; and not seeing you, or hearing anything of you, concluded you had been retaken, or had died on your way." "Heard of me, General ! How could that have been?" "Some one of our men, who got away when you did, came in more than ten days ago, and reported !" The mystery was soon solved, by the appearance of our hospital cook. He had been allowed by the guard to pass and repass at all hours ; was out of the hospital when we left ; at his return, looked first for Doherty, and then for Snow, neither of whom could he find ; recalled the fact that they had been consulting closely the day before ; came to the conclusion that they had escaped ; turned on his heels, was allowed to pass out, went to a neighboring house, where lived a young girl he had been making love to ; roused her, and exchanged his clothes for an old suit of her father's, which she threw out of the window ; started off; walked all night ; and, after a good nap, started the next day, in broad daylight ; was halted by one of a party of loyal men called , organized to resist conscription in their region ; was conducted to the officer in command, to whom he told his story ; was taken to a neighboring house, where he was given his meals, and kept secreted till night ; — then mounted on horseback and guided safely on his way till morning ; — when he was again ushered into a farmhouse, where he was fed and kept through the day, as before ; when, mounted upon another horse, he was again guided on his way. And so, concealed and well-cared for by day, — and riding from station to station by night, — he made, in a iveek's time, a pleasant journey ; while we, unaided, had had seventeen days of toil, exposure, suffering and danger. Seeing my enfeebled condition, Gen. Kelley sent for Dr. Lewis, surgeon at the General Hospital at Claryville, to whom he gave me in charge. Here I was given the luxury of a warm bath ; — was furnished with a change of underclothing, after my wounds, which were in a sad state, were dressed ; — and, refreshed by a delicious supper and the cool breezes of the mountain, I rested in the quiet enjoyment of my accomplished escape. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 003 633 668 7 HoUinger pH8.5 Mill Run F3-1955