Part 2. by Ulysses S. Grant]@TWC D-Link book Part 2. 18/24 He was so crestfallen that I believe if I had ordered him to leave the car he would have gone quietly out, saying to himself: "More Yankee oppression." By nightfall the late defenders of Camp Jackson were all within the walls of the St.Louis arsenal, prisoners of war. The next day I left St.Louis for Mattoon, Illinois, where I was to muster in the regiment from that congressional district. This was the 21st Illinois infantry, the regiment of which I subsequently became colonel. I mustered one regiment afterwards, when my services for the State were about closed. He was a native of Illinois and well acquainted with most of the prominent men in the State. |