[From Canal Boy to President by Horatio Alger, Jr.]@TWC D-Link bookFrom Canal Boy to President CHAPTER XXII 1/11
CHAPTER XXII. JOHN JORDAN'S DANGEROUS JOURNEY. Col.
Garfield had already sent on his regiment in advance to Louisa, twenty-eight miles up the Big Sandy. There he joined them on the 24th, having waited at Catlettsburg only long enough to forward to them necessary supplies. The arrival of the regiment was opportune, for the district was thoroughly alarmed.
A regiment had been stationed there--the Fourteenth Kentucky--but had hastily retreated to the mouth of the river during the night of the 19th, under the impression that Marshall was advancing with his forces to drive them into the Ohio.
It was a false alarm, but the Union citizens were very much alarmed, and were preparing with their families to cross the river for safety.
With the appearance of Garfield's regiment a feeling of security returned. I am anxious to make plain to my boy readers the manner in which the young colonel managed his campaign.
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