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Personal Memoirs-2 [18]

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in regard

to my operating east of the Blue Ridge. The upshot was that my views

against such a plan were practically agreed to, and two engineer

officers were designated to return with me for the purpose of

reporting on a defensive line in the valley that could be held while

the bulk of my troops were being detached to Petersburg. Colonel

Alexander and Colonel Thom both of the Engineer Corps, reported to

accompany me, and at 12 o'clock we took the train.



We arrived about dark at Martinsburg, and there found the escort of

three hundred men which I had ordered before leaving Cedar Creek. We

spent that night at Martinsburg, and early next morning mounted and

started up the Valley pike for Winchester, leaving Captain Sheridan

behind to conduct to the army the Commissioners whom the State of New

York had sent down to receive the vote of her troops in the coming

Presidential election. Colonel Alexander was a man of enormous

weight, and Colonel Thom correspondingly light, and as both were

unaccustomed to riding we had to go slowly, losing so much time, in

fact, that we did not reach Winchester till between 3 and 4 o'clock

in the afternoon, though the distance is but twenty-eight miles. As

soon as we arrived at Colonel Edwards's headquarters in the town,

where I intended stopping for the night, I sent a courier to the

front to bring me a report of the condition of affairs, and then took

Colonel Alexander out on the heights about Winchester, in order that

he might overlook the country, and make up his mind as to the utility

of fortifying there. By the time we had completed our survey it was

dark, and just as we reached Colonel Edwards's house on our return a

courier came in from Cedar Creek bringing word that everything was

all right, that the enemy was quiet at Fisher's Hill, and that a

brigade of Grover's division was to make a reconnoissance in the

morning, the 19th, so about 10 o'clock I went to bed greatly

relieved, and expecting to rejoin my headquarters at my leisure next

day.



Toward 6 o'clock the morning of the 19th, the officer on picket duty

at Winchester came to my room, I being yet in bed, and reported

artillery firing from the direction of Cedar Creek. I asked him if

the firing was continuous or only desultory, to which he replied that

it was not a sustained fire, but rather irregular and fitful. I

remarked: "It's all right; Grover has gone out this morning to make a

reconnoissance, and he is merely feeling the enemy." I tried to go to

sleep again, but grew so restless that I could not, and soon got up

and dressed myself. A little later the picket officer came back and

reported that the firing, which could be distinctly heard from his

line on the heights outside of Winchester, was still going on. I

asked him if it sounded like a battle, and as he again said that it

did not, I still inferred that the cannonading was caused by Grover's

division banging away at the enemy simply to find out what he was up

to. However, I went down-stairs and requested that breakfast be

hurried up, and at the same time ordered the horses to be saddled and

in readiness, for I concluded to go to the front before any further

examinations were made in regard to the defensive line.



We mounted our horses between half-past 8 and 9, and as we were

proceeding up the street which leads directly through Winchester,

from the Logan residence, where Edwards was quartered, to the Valley

pike, I noticed that there were many women at the windows and doors

of the houses, who kept shaking their skirts at us and who were

otherwise markedly insolent in their demeanor, but supposing this

conduct to be instigated by their well-known and perhaps natural

prejudices, I ascribed to it no unusual significance. On reaching

the edge of the town I halted a moment, and there heard quite

distinctly the sound of artillery firing in an unceasing roar.

Concluding from this that
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