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Personal Memoirs-2 [108]

By Root 592 0

day we left Supply we, had another dose of sleet and snow, but

nevertheless we made good time, and by night-fall reached Bluff

Creek. In twenty-four hours more we made Fort Dodge, and on the 6th

of March arrived at Fort Hays. Just south of the Smoky Hill River, a

little before we got to the post, a courier heading for Fort Dodge

passed us at a rapid gait. Suspecting that he had despatches for me,

I directed my outrider to overtake him and find out. The courier

soon turned back, and riding up to my ambulance handed me a telegram

notifying me that General Grant, on the day of his inauguration,

March 4, 1869, had appointed me Lieutenant-General of the Army. When

I reported in Washington, the President desired me to return to New

Orleans and resume command of the Fifth Military District, but this

was not at all to my liking, so I begged off, and was assigned to

take charge of the Division of the Missouri, succeeding General

Sherman, who had just been ordered to assume command of the Army.









CHAPTER XV.



INSPECTING MILITARY POSTS IN UTAH AND MONTANA--DESIRE TO WITNESS THE

FRANCO-GERMAN WAR--ON A SAND-BAR IN THE MISSOURI--A BEAR HUNT--AN

INDIAN SCARE--MYRIADS OF MOSQUITOES--PERMISSION GIVEN TO VISIT

EUROPE--CALLING ON PRESIDENT GRANT--SAILING FOR LIVERPOOL--ARRIVAL IN

BERLIN.



After I had for a year been commanding the Division of the Missouri,

which embraced the entire Rocky Mountain region, I found it necessary

to make an inspection of the military posts in northern Utah and

Montana, in order by personal observation to inform myself of their

location and needs, and at the same time become acquainted with the

salient geographical and topographical features of that section of my

division. Therefore in May, 1870, I started west by the Union-

Pacific railroad, and on arriving at Corinne' Station, the next

beyond Ogden, took passage by stage-coach for Helena, the capital of

Montana Territory. Helena is nearly five hundred miles north of

Corinne, and under ordinary conditions the journey was, in those

days, a most tiresome one. As the stage kept jogging on day and

night, there was little chance for sleep, and there being with me a

sufficient number of staff-officers to justify the proceeding, we

chartered the "outfit," stipulating that we were to stop over one

night on the road to get some rest. This rendered the journey more

tolerable, and we arrived at Helena without extraordinary fatigue.



Before I left Chicago the newspapers were filled with rumors of

impending war between Germany and France. I was anxious to observe

the conflict, if it was to occur, but reports made one day concerning

the beginning of hostilities would be contradicted the next, and it

was not till I reached Helena that the despatches lost their doubtful

character, and later became of so positive a nature as to make it

certain that the two nations would fight. I therefore decided to cut

short my tour of inspection, so that I could go abroad to witness the

war, if the President would approve. This resolution limited my stay

in Helena to a couple of days, which were devoted to arranging for an

exploration of what are now known as the Upper and the Lower Geyser

Basins of the Yellowstone Park. While journeying between Corinne and

Helena I had gained some vague knowledge of these geysers from an old

mountaineer named Atkinson, but his information was very indefinite,

mostly second-hand; and there was such general uncertainty as to the

character of this wonderland that I authorized an escort of soldiers

to go that season from Fort Ellis with a small party, to make such

superficial explorations as to justify my sending an engineer officer

with a well-equipped expedition there next summer to scientifically

examine and report upon the strange country. When the arrangements

for this preliminary expedition were completed I started for Fort

Benton, the head of
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