[W. T. Sherman<br> P. H. Sheridan<br>Memoirs of Three Civil War Generals by U. S. Grant]@TWC D-Link book
W. T. Sherman
P. H. Sheridan
Memoirs of Three Civil War Generals

CHAPTER XX
20/20

Some of the officers expressed a desire to see the field; but the request was refused with the statement that we had no dead there.
While on the truce-boat I mentioned to an officer, whom I had known both at West Point and in the Mexican war, that I was in the cornfield near their troops when they passed; that I had been on horseback and had worn a soldier's overcoat at the time.

This officer was on General Polk's staff.

He said both he and the general had seen me and that Polk had said to his men, "There is a Yankee; you may try your marksmanship on him if you wish," but nobody fired at me.
Belmont was severely criticised in the North as a wholly unnecessary battle, barren of results, or the possibility of them from the beginning.

If it had not been fought, Colonel Oglesby would probably have been captured or destroyed with his three thousand men.

Then I should have been culpable indeed..


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