. . to decidewhich should have were two men inCompany I, of the Sixty-fifth, each of whom had oneshoe in fair condition, whilethe other had gone to piecesand was a hopeless divided a pair be-tween them, each wearingone new shoe and one oldone. During the last daysDecember, and up tothe middle of January, theweather was intensely covered the ground tothe depth of six inches. Atplaces in East Tennessee, where they had such things 1>R]Nril iAN AN[| S[ (>Qm as thermometers, the mer- lieutenant, sixty
. . to decidewhich should have were two men inCompany I, of the Sixty-fifth, each of whom had oneshoe in fair condition, whilethe other had gone to piecesand was a hopeless divided a pair be-tween them, each wearingone new shoe and one oldone. During the last daysDecember, and up tothe middle of January, theweather was intensely covered the ground tothe depth of six inches. Atplaces in East Tennessee, where they had such things 1>R]Nril iAN AN[| S[ (>Qm as thermometers, the mer- lieutenant, sixty-?ifth. Ctiry fell, on New Years Day, to zero. People said it was thehardest winter they had known in twenty years. The soldiers oithe Fourth corps certainly thought that the Arctic region couldnot have been worse. Many of those who stood on the outpduring those fearful days and nights had their faces, hands andfeet severely nipped by the fi « The men built huts and shacks of all shapes and sizes toprotect them from the weather. In front of these, great fire.
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookidstoryoftheshermanbrigadet