. The great locomotive chase; a history of the Andrews railroad raid into Georgia in 1862 . nguor caused by the supper and the grateful heat, it may be a good timeto sketch these companions with whom I was so long and intimately asso-ciated. There is a deep sorrow in the task, for not one of them emergedfrom the gloom and darkness into which we were entering. George D. Wilson was the most remarkable man of all who enlistedwith Andrews. He was not highly educated, and had spent many yearsas an itinerant journeyman shoemaker. He was 32—nearly ten yearsolder than the others, which increased his a


. The great locomotive chase; a history of the Andrews railroad raid into Georgia in 1862 . nguor caused by the supper and the grateful heat, it may be a good timeto sketch these companions with whom I was so long and intimately asso-ciated. There is a deep sorrow in the task, for not one of them emergedfrom the gloom and darkness into which we were entering. George D. Wilson was the most remarkable man of all who enlistedwith Andrews. He was not highly educated, and had spent many yearsas an itinerant journeyman shoemaker. He was 32—nearly ten yearsolder than the others, which increased his ascendancy over us. He hadtravelled and observed much and forgotten nothing. In vigor and forceof language I never knew a man who surpassed him. He delighted inargument on any topic—social, political, or religious—and was an adver-sary not to be despised. In the use of scathing and bitter language, inhard, positive, unyielding dogmatism, in the power to bury an opponentuuder a flood of exhaustless abuse, he excelled. In coolness and brav- First Lessons in Disguise and Duplicity. 67. cry, in natural shrewdness and quickness of intellect, he was fully equalto Andrews; no danger could irighten him. His resources always rosewith the demand, and on one me-morable occasion he was carriedto the very summit of moral hero-ism,and in the whole war no deathwas more sublime than his. Ourfriendship, which began on thisfirst , increased to the end,though we often engaged inheated discussion. Wilson was tall and spare,with high cheek-bones, over-hanging brows, sharp gray eyeb,thin brownish hair, and lon^rthin whiskers. The accompany-ing photograph was taken tenyears earlier. Perry G. Shadrack was abouttwentytwo, and came fromPennsylvania to Knoxville, Ohio,when the 2nd Ohio Regimentwas being reorganized for the three years service. He was not large,but plump and solidly built, merry and reckless, with an inexhaustiblestore of good nature. His temper was quick, but he was very forgi


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Keywords: ., bookauthorpittenge, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookyear1910