CONTENTS

[CHAPTER I]
Learning to be a Soldier[9]
Leaving Camp Lincoln for the front. At Baltimore, Maryland. Cantaloupes and Peaches. Annapolis, Maryland. Chesapeake Bayoysters. Assisting negroes to escape. Doing picket duty on the railroad. A Negro husking. Chaplain Ball arrives from Massachusetts.Assigned to the 2d Brigade, 2d Division, 9th Army Corps.
[CHAPTER II]
The North Carolina Campaign[27]
On shipbound. Burial at sea. At Hatteras Inlet. Battle of Roanoke Island. Battle of Newbern. Reading Johnnies’ loveletters. Athletics. Battle of Camden. Went to the relief of the 2d Maryland.
[CHAPTER III]
In Virginia under General Pope[53]
A ride in the Confederate doctor’s “One horse Chaise.” Living off the country. Learning the distance to GermaniaFord. The Second Battle of Bull Run. The Battle of Chantilly.
[CHAPTER IV]
With McClellan in Maryland[83]
The Barbara Fretchie Incident. The Battle of South Mountain. Death of General Reno. The Battle of Antietam. Clara Barton.President Lincoln visits the army. Visited a farmhouse very near a Confederate Camp.
[CHAPTER V]
The Fredericksburg Campaign[101]
A hard race for a pig. Chaplain Ball returns home. Picket duty along the river. The Battle of Fredericksburg. Burying the dead.Christmas revels with the Confederates. A band of horn-blowers. A raid on the sutler. A costume ball at Hotel de Ville.
[CHAPTER VI]
Playing Soldier in Kentucky[127]
Our breakfast at Baltimore. The trip west. The Reception at Mt. Sterling. Moved into the town.
[CHAPTER VII]
The Campaign in Tennessee[137]
We crossed the Cumberland Range. The patient mule. Seeing a railroad engine with a train of cars make a dive. The siege ofKnoxville. Will you lend me my Nigger Colonel. Re-enlistment. Recrossed the Mountains, returning to Kentucky on the way home, on ourre-enlistment furlough.
[CHAPTER VIII]
Home on a Re-enlistment Furlough[155]
The trip home. Reception at Worcester. The Social Whirl. We returned to Annapolis.
[CHAPTER IX]
With Grant in Virginia[159]
The Battle of the Wilderness. The Battle of Spotsylvania Courthouse. Johnnies caught un-dressed. The Battle of Bethseda Church.The Johnnie who wanted to see the sun rise. Life in the trenches during the siege of Petersburg. Wounded.
[CHAPTER X]
Life in the Hospital[182]
That ride in the ambulance. Emory Hospital. The woman with my Mother’s name. The dreadful death rate. PresidentLincoln’s Second Inauguration. Booth’s Ride. Doing clerical work in Philadelphia. Discharged.

Chapter I

LEARNING TO BE A SOLDIER

Leaving Camp Lincoln for the front. At Baltimore, Maryland. Cantaloupes and Peaches. Annapolis, Maryland. Chesapeake Bay oysters. Assisting negroes to escape. Doing picket duty on the railroad. A Negro husking. Chaplain Ball arrives from Massachusetts. Assigned to the 2d Brigade, 2d Division, 9th Army Corps.

During the winter of 1860 and 1861 there was great uneasiness felt in the North. The South, through the democratic party, had been the ruling section of the country most of the time since the establishment of the Republic, but at the time of the election in the autumn of 1860 a northern political party had won. That party was not only a northern party, but it was an abolition party. The election of an abolition president, Mr. Lincoln, by the North, was at once regarded as a menace to the slave holding interests of the South, which section at once began to make preparations to withdraw from the Union. As the spring months passed and Mr. Lincoln, the new president, took his seat, secession was more and more talked about. Soon the 6th Massachusetts Regiment was attacked in Baltimore. Fort Sumter in Charleston Harbor was fired upon. Battalion after battalion of the state militia were being hurried away south for the protection of the Capitol. It thus became more and more apparent that there was to be war, and the all-important question from the northern viewpoint was, the preservation of the Union. One Sunday in the month of June I went home to visit my family, I being at the time at work away from home, and while there, quietly asked my mother what she would say if I should enlist. Well, that question produced a shock, and was not answered as quietly as it was asked. I was told I could not enlist without her consent, which she should not give, and I was heartily laughed at by my brothers and sisters. However, when it became known that a company was being recruited at Barre, I went quietly over there and enlisted, then I went home and told the family what I had done. There was a rumpus, of course, but it passed off, and after a few days, hearing nothing from the company, I decided to go back to work again and await developments. On the 22d I learned that the company was going into camp at Worcester the next day. I was on hand and went along.

A number of stage-coaches were provided to take us to Worcester. It was an interesting and picturesque ride of a little more than twenty miles. Arriving in Worcester early in the afternoon, we went to the Agricultural Fair Grounds, which had been converted into a campground and named Camp Lincoln from Levi Lincoln, the first mayor of Worcester and a Governor of Massachusetts, and set to work putting up tents and forming a company street. Sleeping in tents, drilling and doing guard duty seemed strange at first, and was a good deal of a change from the duties of a farmer’s boy, but it was interesting to be among a lot of live young men who were brimful of enthusiasm, patriotism and fun.