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Martha Summerhayes
Vanished Arizona: Recollections of the Army Life by a New England Woman
Published by Good Press, 2019
EAN 4057664602848
Table of Contents
CHAPTER I. GERMANY AND THE ARMY
CHAPTER III. ARMY HOUSE-KEEPING
CHAPTER IV. DOWN THE PACIFIC COAST
CHAPTER VI. UP THE RIO COLORADO
CHAPTER VII. THE MOJAVE DESERT
CHAPTER VIII. LEARNING HOW TO SOLDIER
CHAPTER IX. ACROSS THE MOGOLLONS
CHAPTER X. A PERILOUS ADVENTURE
CHAPTER XII. LIFE AMONGST THE APACHES
CHAPTER XIV. A MEMORABLE JOURNEY
CHAPTER XV. FORDING THE LITTLE COLORADO
CHAPTER XVII. THE COLORADO DESERT
CHAPTER XVIII. EHRENBERG ON THE COLORADO
CHAPTER XIX. SUMMER AT EHRENBERG
CHAPTER XXI. WINTER IN EHRENBERG
CHAPTER XXII. RETURN TO THE STATES
CHAPTER XXIII. BACK TO ARIZONA
CHAPTER XXIV. UP THE VALLEY OF THE GILA
CHAPTER XXV. OLD CAMP MACDOWELL
CHAPTER XXVII. THE EIGHTH FOOT LEAVES ARIZONA
CHAPTER XXVIII. CALIFORNIA AND NEVADA
CHAPTER XXIX. CHANGING STATION
CHAPTER XXXIII. DAVID'S ISLAND
Preface
I have written this story of my army life at the urgent and ceaseless request of my children.
For whenever I allude to those early days, and tell to them the tales they have so often heard, they always say: "Now, mother, will you write these stories for us? Please, mother, do; we must never forget them."
Then, after an interval, "Mother, have you written those stories of Arizona yet?" until finally, with the aid of some old letters written from those very places (the letters having been preserved, with other papers of mine, by an uncle in New England long since dead), I have been able to give a fairly connected story.
I have not attempted to commemorate my husband's brave career in the Civil War, as I was not married until some years after the close of that war, nor to describe the many Indian campaigns in which he took part, nor to write about the achievements of the old Eighth Infantry. I leave all that to the historian. I have given simply the impressions made upon the mind of a young New England woman who left her comfortable home in the early seventies, to follow a second lieutenant into the wildest encampments of the American army.
Hoping the story may possess some interest for the younger women of the army, and possibly for some of our old friends, both in the army and in civil life, I venture to send it forth.
POSTCRIPT (second edition).
The appendix to this, the second edition of my book, will tell something of the kind manner in which the first edition was received by my friends and the public at large.
But as several people had expressed a wish that I should tell more of my army experiences I have gone carefully over the entire book, adding some detail and a few incidents which had come to my mind later.
I have also been able, with some difficulty