The Memoirs of General Philip H. Sheridan, Volume I., Part 1 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 105 pages of information about The Memoirs of General Philip H. Sheridan, Volume I., Part 1.

The Memoirs of General Philip H. Sheridan, Volume I., Part 1 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 105 pages of information about The Memoirs of General Philip H. Sheridan, Volume I., Part 1.

PREFACE

When, yielding to the solicitations of my friends, I finally decided to write these Memoirs, the greatest difficulty which confronted me was that of recounting my share in the many notable events of the last three decades, in which I played a part, without entering too fully into the history of these years, and at the same time without giving to my own acts an unmerited prominence.  To what extent I have overcome this difficulty I must leave the reader to judge.

In offering this record, penned by my own hand, of the events of my life, and of my participation in our great struggle for national existence, human liberty, and political equality, I make no pretension to literary merit; the importance of the subject-matter of my narrative is my only claim on the reader’s attention.

Respectfully dedicating this work to my comrades in arms during the War of the Rebellion, I leave it as a heritage to my children, and as a source of information for the future historian.

P. H. Sheridan.

Nonguitt, Mass., August 2, 1888

PERSONAL MEMOIRS

P. H. Sheridan.

VOLUME I.

PART I.

CHAPTER I.

Ancestry—­birth—­early education—­A clerk in A grocery store—­appointment—­Monroe shoes—­journey to west point—­hazing —­A fisticuff battle—­suspended—­returns to clerkship—­graduation.

My parents, John and Mary Sheridan, came to America in 1830, having been induced by the representations of my father’s uncle, Thomas Gainor, then living in Albany, N. Y., to try their fortunes in the New World:  They were born and reared in the County Cavan, Ireland, where from early manhood my father had tilled a leasehold on the estate of Cherrymoult; and the sale of this leasehold provided him with means to seek a new home across the sea.  My parents were blood relations—­cousins in the second degree—­my mother, whose maiden name was Minor, having descended from a collateral branch of my father’s family.  Before leaving Ireland they had two children, and on the 6th of March, 1831, the year after their arrival in this country, I was born, in Albany, N. Y., the third child in a family which eventually increased to six—­four boys and two girls.

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The Memoirs of General Philip H. Sheridan, Volume I., Part 1 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.