The day was duly
celebrated in camp. Rhode Island furnished her troops with a good dinner. Prof.
Sweet treated the multitude with a tight rope performance. The day passed off
smoothly, with the exception of a strange display of authority by a few
corporals, laboring under the idea that their dignity was injured by the men
not paying enough respect to them. In those days gunners and caisson corporals
played gentlemen. They not only expected to be saluted by privates, but induced
the men of their respective detachments to hire negroes to black the boots for
all the men, while actually it was only to wait on the corporals; yet they did
not want to stand the expense alone. Let it be said in our honor, we allowed
this humbug to be of but short duration. I cannot help mentioning the names of
the men of the fourth detachment, not because the men were any better than
others, but because it furnished the most commissioned and non-commissioned
officers of any other in the battery. Corporals, Charles H. Clark and Harry C.
Cushing. Privates, Wm. Drape, George Greenleaf, John H. Lawrence, Ben. S.
Monroe, Richard Percival, Theodore Reichardt, Robert Rowbottom, Robert Raynor,
Charles V. Scott, and Arnold A. Walker.
SOURCE: Theodore
Reichardt, Diary of Battery A, First
Regiment Rhode Island Light Artillery, p. 8-9
No comments:
Post a Comment