. . t on athome, and nobody thereknew anything about it tillthe lieutenant started withhis men for was two or threeweeks after I enlisted. Ithought if I could only givefather the slip and get tocamp it would be all the time for the com-pany to start I sneakedaway from home and joinedit at the depot Before Tcould get aboard the trainI felt somebody take holdof my ear. It was father,and he didnt let go till he had got me home. 111 lay low and kept quiet for a week, and father thought Ihad given it up. Lieutenant


. . t on athome, and nobody thereknew anything about it tillthe lieutenant started withhis men for was two or threeweeks after I enlisted. Ithought if I could only givefather the slip and get tocamp it would be all the time for the com-pany to start I sneakedaway from home and joinedit at the depot Before Tcould get aboard the trainI felt somebody take holdof my ear. It was father,and he didnt let go till he had got me home. 111 lay low and kept quiet for a week, and father thought Ihad given it up. Lieutenant Sanders had raised a squad of menfor the Sixty-fourth. When he started for Camp Buckingham, Istole away from home, got on the train and went with joined the battery and then I thought everything was after I had been in camp about a week I got a telegram froma friend in Akron, telling that father was going to start the nextday to take me home. This made me sick. I went to LieutenantBaldwin and we both went to Captaiu Bradley to talk it over. I. IKEUDAS u I COM PAN V H. SIXTY F1FIH. 79* THESE W^NT THROUGH THE STORMS.


Size: 1319px × 1893px
Photo credit: © Reading Room 2020 / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookidstoryoftheshermanbrigadet