The Gilded Age


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coming of enormous wealth.  
He went out with a company from Hawkeye to the war, and was not wanting  
in courage, but he would have been a better soldier if he had been less  
engaged in contrivances for circumventing the enemy by strategy unknown  
to the books.  
It happened to him to be captured in one of his self-appointed  
expeditions, but the federal colonel released him, after a short  
examination, satisfied that he could most injure the confederate forces  
opposed to the Unionists by returning him to his regiment. Col. Sellers  
was of course a prominent man during the war. He was captain of the home  
guards in Hawkeye, and he never left home except upon one occasion, when  
on the strength of a rumor, he executed a flank movement and fortified  
Stone's Landing, a place which no one unacquainted with the country would  
be likely to find.  
"
Gad," said the Colonel afterwards, "the Landing is the key to upper  
Missouri, and it is the only place the enemy never captured. If other  
places had been defended as well as that was, the result would have been  
different, sir."  
The Colonel had his own theories about war as he had in other things.  
If everybody had stayed at home as he did, he said, the South never would  
have been conquered. For what would there have been to conquer? Mr.  
Jeff Davis was constantly writing him to take command of a corps in the  
191  


Page
189 190 191 192 193

Quick Jump
1 170 341 511 681