Personal Memoirs of P. H. Sheridan, General, United States Army — Complete eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 704 pages of information about Personal Memoirs of P. H. Sheridan, General, United States Army — Complete.

Personal Memoirs of P. H. Sheridan, General, United States Army — Complete eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 704 pages of information about Personal Memoirs of P. H. Sheridan, General, United States Army — Complete.
roads, a result of clamor for internal improvements—­were in course of construction, and my father turned his attention to them, believing that they offered opportunities for a successful occupation.  Encouraged by a civil engineer named Bassett, who had taken a fancy to him, he put in bids for a small contract on the Cumberland Road, known as the “National Road,” which was then being extended west from the Ohio River.  A little success in this first enterprise led him to take up contracting as a business, which he followed on various canals and macadamized roads then building in different parts of the State of Ohio, with some good fortune for awhile, but in 1853 what little means he had saved were swallowed up —­in bankruptcy, caused by the failure of the Sciota and Hocking Valley Railroad Company, for which he was fulfilling a contract at the time, and this disaster left him finally only a small farm, just outside the village of Somerset, where he dwelt until his death in 1875.

My father’s occupation kept him away from home much of the time during my boyhood, and as a consequence I grew up under the sole guidance and training of my mother, whose excellent common sense and clear discernment in every way fitted her for such maternal duties.  When old enough I was sent to the village school, which was taught by an old-time Irish “master”—­one of those itinerant dominies of the early frontier—­who, holding that to spare the rod was to spoil the child, if unable to detect the real culprit when any offense had been committed, would consistently apply the switch to the whole school without discrimination.  It must be conceded that by this means he never failed to catch the guilty mischief-maker.  The school-year was divided into terms of three months, the teacher being paid in each term a certain sum—­three dollars, I think, for each pupil-and having an additional perquisite in the privilege of boarding around at his option in the different families to which his scholars belonged.  This feature was more than acceptable to the parents at times, for how else could they so thoroughly learn all the neighborhood gossip?  But the pupils were in almost unanimous opposition, because Mr. McNanly’s unheralded advent at any one’s house resulted frequently in the discovery that some favorite child had been playing “hookey,” which means (I will say to the uninitiated, if any such there be) absenting one’s self from school without permission, to go on a fishing or a swimming frolic.  Such at least was my experience more than once, for Mr. McNanly particularly favored my mother’s house, because of a former acquaintanceship in Ireland, and many a time a comparison of notes proved that I had been in the woods with two playfellows, named Binckly and Greiner, when the master thought I was home, ill, and my mother, that I was at school, deeply immersed in study.  However, with these and other delinquencies not uncommon among boys, I learned at McNanly’s school, and a little later,

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Personal Memoirs of P. H. Sheridan, General, United States Army — Complete from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.