The Young Sharpshooter at Antietam
E-text prepared by Juliet Sutherland, Mary Meehan, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net)
BOSTON AND NEW YORK HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY The Riverside Press Cambridge 1914
COPYRIGHT, 1914, BY EVERETT T. TOMLINSON
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
Published September 1914
This story has been written with no desire to revive or even to keep alive the spirit of the struggle between the States.
Nevertheless the facts which have made our history and the forces which have entered into the making of the life of our country ought not to be ignored or forgotten. The effect of the conflict was too great for that. The Civil War is now far enough away to enable us to see the heroic, dramatic, and even romantic elements that composed it; and all these, too, free from the bitterness which naturally was characteristic of the times.
To-day each side understands the other better, and with a more complete knowledge is able to see more clearly the sterling qualities of both contestants.
The appreciation of the importance of Lee's first attempt to invade the North is necessary if one is to understand the struggle which followed. The dash, spirit, and skill of the great Southern leader, as well as the energy and the daring of his lieutenants, are seen to-day more clearly than in the times when his effort was made. What the consequence would have been if General Lee had succeeded, all can appreciate. The battle of Antietam was almost a pivot of the great Civil War.
That my young readers may gain a more complete knowledge of the daring advance of the great Southern general and the result which followed when his army was turned back into Virginia, I have written this story. My hope is that it will lead to a careful study of the conflict, and that boys, North and South alike, may be led into an increased knowledge of and interest in our common country.
Everett T. Tomlinson.
Everett T. Tomlinson
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THE YOUNG SHARPSHOOTER AT ANTIETAM
THEY WERE FALLING BY SCORES
PREFACE
CONTENTS
ILLUSTRATIONS
THE YOUNG SHARPSHOOTER AT ANTIETAM
THE IRISHMAN AND HIS PIG
THE SUTLER'S GOODS
INTERCEPTED
THE V IN THE FENCE
THE PLAN OF GENERAL LEE
LONG JOHN
"DEY SAY YO' HAB HAWNS"
CAUGHT
UNDER GUARD
THE PLOT
INTO THE STORM
NICK
THE GIANT
FRIENDS OF THE UNION
THE SUTLER AS A GUIDE
WARLIKE BEES
NOEL HEARD THE BULLET AS IT WHISTLED PAST
A HELPER
THE GUEST ROOM
THE FIRE
AT THE FORK
THE STACK OF STRAW
"WHO'S IN THERE?"
THE CARPET-BAG
A MYSTERY
THE GUARD-HOUSE
A FRUITLESS INTERVIEW
THE EXECUTION
THE TEST
THE SHARPSHOOTERS
THE PRESIDENT'S ACTION
THE BATTLE
THE FOLLOWING DAY
ANTIETAM
CONCLUSION
THE END
Dr. Tomlinson's Books
The Boys of Old Monmouth
A Jersey Boy in the Revolution
In the Hands of the Redcoats
Under Colonial Colors
A Lieutenant Under Washington
The Rider of the Black Horse
The Red Chief
Marching Against the Iroquois
Light Horse Harry's Legion
The Camp-Fire of Mad Anthony
Mad Anthony's Young Scout
The Champion of the Regiment
The Young Minute-Man of 1812
The Young Sharpshooter
The Young Sharpshooter at Antietam
Young Americans In The British Isles.