
Ten Years in the Ranks U. S. Army
Preface
PART I. Enlistment and Service on Governor's Island, New York Harbor, in 1854.
PART II. At Carlisle Barracks, Pa., in 1855.
PART III. Journey from Carlisle to Fort Pierre, Nebraska Territory in 1855.
PART IV. Fort Pierre and the Sioux Indians, 1855-1856.
PART V. Establishing Fort Lookout, 1856-1857.
PART VI. Service at Fort Randall, Campaigning in Kansas and Expiration of My Enlistment—1857-1859.
PART VII. Re-enlistment and Return to Frontiers, 1860.
PART VIII. Service In Washington and Georgetown, D.C., 1861-1862.
A twelve‑year‑old boy leaves his widowed mother’s home and steps onto Governor’s Island, eager to become a soldier’s musician. He quickly learns the rhythm of drill, the cramped quarters of the barracks, and the rough humor of his fellow drummers and fifers. Through vivid detail he shares the first taste of military life—marches, drum calls, and the simple comforts of a coal fire and a shared blanket.
The narrative then widens to follow his ten‑year journey across the frontier and into the early days of the Civil War. He describes the everyday chores of a rank‑and‑file soldier, the challenges of marching through unfamiliar terrain, and the bonds forged in camp. Told from memory with a straightforward voice, the memoir offers a clear window into the ordinary yet demanding world of an enlisted man in a pivotal era of American history.
Language
en
Duration
~12 hours (712K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)
Release date
2014-06-12
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

b. 1841
A former child soldier turned memoirist, he left behind one of the most vivid firsthand accounts of everyday U.S. Army life before and during the Civil War. His writing is valued not for grand speeches, but for the small, lived-in details that make history feel close.
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