The Old First Massachusetts Coast Artillery in War and Peace. Frederick Morse Cutler

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Название The Old First Massachusetts Coast Artillery in War and Peace
Автор произведения Frederick Morse Cutler
Жанр Языкознание
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Издательство Языкознание
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isbn 4064066157043



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       Frederick Morse Cutler

      The Old First Massachusetts Coast Artillery in War and Peace

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066157043

       THE OLD FIRST

       THE OLD FIRST

       CHAPTER I

       THE COAST ARTILLERY

       CHAPTER II

       1784-1840

       CHAPTER III

       1840-1861

       CHAPTER IV

       RESPONDING TO THE PRESIDENT’S CALL

       CHAPTER V

       THE FIGHTING FIRST

       CHAPTER VI

       1866-1878

       CHAPTER VII

       THE OLD “TIGER” FIRST

       CHAPTER VIII

       “THE CAPE”

       CHAPTER IX

       SINCE 1878

       CHAPTER X

       FINALLY

       APPENDIX I

       GENEALOGY OF THE COAST ARTILLERY The present companies and their predecessors

       APPENDIX II

       BIBLIOGRAPHY

       INDEX

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      When Chaplain Minot J. Savage first listened to the “March of the First,” inspiration fired his soul; the music was repeating a message to him. Was there something in the brazen voice of the horns, a magical harmony of sound with sense; or was it merely the loyal Chaplain’s imagination? At any rate this is what he heard:

      “We’re brothers of all noble men,

       Who wear our country’s blue,

       We brothers find in any race,

       Where men are brave and true.

       But we’ve a pride in our own band,

       And we are all agreed,

       Whatever grand deeds others do,

       The ‘Old First’ still shall lead.

       So while our feet keep music time,

       Our hearts are proudly beating

       An echo to Man’s forward hope

       That never knows retreating.”

      And now, whenever “Adjutant’s call” sounds and the companies move into line with the precision and rhythmic swing characteristic of well-trained troops, they also hear the message which was written down for them by the Chaplain many years ago, “The Old First still shall lead.” They hear and believe.

      

      Today it becomes the privilege of another Chaplain to set forth in this little book the reasons why the Old First believes in itself. We shall see how the present grows out of a long and noble past. Back in Civil War times observers noted that the regiment was one to be proud of; there was a large proportion of sensible, solid men who enlisted because it seemed duty, whose patriotism was not silly or vulgar, but strong and serious. Today likewise the Inspector General reports that the personnel is unexcelled; only men of good character are enlisted; standards are very high. And for the largest part the men are not in the service for any personal profit to themselves—there is too little pay to make money the attraction. They are soldiers at the sacrifice of their own leisure, and often of their comfort. A modern National Guardsman is averse to boasting or heroics—he is the most matter-of-fact citizen of all. But surely the Chaplain will be pardoned for saying, what the Guardsman would be most reluctant to claim, that in the old regiment patriotism is not a matter of words, it is made up of deeds.

      Massachusetts looks in large degree to the command for the coast defence of Boston. America’s center of wealth and manufacturing, the Commonwealth holds the key to the whole country. Within a radius of two hundred miles from Boston is manufactured practically every kind of supply and equipment; while New York, the world’s center of wealth and finance, is only slightly more than two hundred miles away. To possess Massachusetts would afford hostile invaders the best possible base; the Coast Artillery is an essential factor in the defence of