[With Kitchener in the Soudan by G. A. Henty]@TWC D-Link bookWith Kitchener in the Soudan CHAPTER 5: Southward 14/37
The heavy stores were towed up by steamers and native craft.
Most of the engines and trucks had been transferred to the desert line; but a few were still retained, to carry up troops if necessary, and aid the craft in accumulating stores. One of these trains started a few hours after the arrival of the steamer at Wady Halfa.
Gregory, with the officers going up, occupied two horse boxes.
Several of them had been engaged in the last campaign, and pointed out the places of interest. At Sarras, some thirty miles up the road, there had been a fight on the 29th of April, 1887; when the Dervish host, advancing strong in the belief that they could carry all before them down to the sea, were defeated by the Egyptian force under the Sirdar and General Chermside. The next stop of the train was at Akasheh.
This had been a very important station, before the last advance, as all the stores had been accumulated here when the army advanced.
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