[Personal Memoirs of U. S. Grant<br> Volume Two by Ulysses S. Grant]@TWC D-Link book
Personal Memoirs of U. S. Grant
Volume Two

CHAPTER XL
12/17

He delivered a speech of welcome.

His composure showed that it was by no means his maiden effort.

It was long, and I was in torture while he was delivering it, fearing something would be expected from me in response.

I was relieved, however, the people assembled having apparently heard enough.

At all events they commenced a general hand-shaking, which, although trying where there is so much of it, was a great relief to me in this emergency.
From Nashville I telegraphed to Burnside, who was then at Knoxville, that important points in his department ought to be fortified, so that they could be held with the least number of men; to Admiral Porter at Cairo, that Sherman's advance had passed Eastport, Mississippi, that rations were probably on their way from St.Louis by boat for supplying his army, and requesting him to send a gunboat to convoy them; and to Thomas, suggesting that large parties should be put at work on the wagon-road then in use back to Bridgeport.
On the morning of the 21st we took the train for the front, reaching Stevenson Alabama, after dark.


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