Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from An Address on the Unveiling of the Statue of Major-General George G. Meade
Nearly forty years ago the Seminole Indians broke out and commenced murdering the settlers in Florida. Troops were sent into the country and a line of camps was established across the Peninsula. Into one Of these camps, late one afternoon, rode a horseman attended by a single orderly. He was a gaunt, thin man, with a hatchet face and a promi nent aquiline nose. He introduced himself as Lieutenant Meade, Topographical Engineers, just from a reconnoissance on the hostile border. He was wet, tired, and hungry. It was my good fortune to be able to Offer dry clothes, food, and a bed Of blankets to one whose name was destined fourteen years later to render famous the little town Of Gettysburg, in the southern part Of Pennsylvania.
It was the first time I had met him. He was then about thirty-four years Of age, had accompanied our army into Mexico, served in the war with that Country in a subordinate position and without any especial notice. The next time we met he was a brigadier-general Of volunteers, commanding a brigade of the Pennsylvania Reserves in front of Washington in the fall Of 1861.
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