Traveling through western Texas and
the plains of New Mexico is very mountainous and lonely.
Villages of prairie dogs here and there seem to be
about all the living things that the traveler sees.
These little animals burrow deep in the ground, thousands
of them close together, and this is why it is called
a prairie dog town. I was told that these little
dogs live mostly on roots and drink no water.
I give this as it was told me, and do not know how
true it is. One thing which I noticed was that
we would travel two or three hundred miles and not
see any water courses.
The section that I was with was detained
about three hours at El Paso, Texas, on account of
some trouble on the road ahead of us. Many of
us took advantage of this to look about the city.
A considerable change of temperature was noted, it
being much cooler than at New Orleans. Before
the next morning we were passing through New Mexico.
It was cold enough to wear an overcoat, but as we
only had blankets every man had one drawn close around
him, and was then shivering with cold. This cold
weather continued until the Rocky Mountains were crossed,
and we began to descend the Pacific Slope.
Crossing the deserts of Arizona was
disagreeable. The white sand from a distance
looks like snow, and is so dry and light that it is
lifted about by the wind. Some places it will
drift several feet deep. The railroad company
kept men employed all the time shoveling sand from
the track. Nothing but some scattering, scrubby
bushes grows in the deserts. Almost any time
looking from the cars there seems to be smoke away
off in the distance. This is nothing but the
dry sand being blown about by the wind.
Where the railroad crossed the deserts
they are from one hundred and fifty to two hundred
miles wide.
The first place we stopped after crossing
the Rocky Mountains was in the city of Los Angeles,
California. The good people of Los Angeles had
a bountiful supply of oranges and other nice fruit,
which were given to the soldiers, who enjoyed them
very much. Some towns where we stopped the citizens
would put two or three crates of oranges in every car
of our train.
The country was beautiful, orange
groves and orchards of different kinds were numerous
and fine.
California is the most beautiful country
I have seen in my travels from Georgia to the Philippine
Islands.
The Oakland Ferry was reached about
ten o’clock on the morning of the first day
of June. Our regiment commenced to cross at once
over to San Francisco. A detail was left to take
our supplies from the train and load them on boats,
all the balance of the regiment going across.
My first sergeant was unfriendly to me and included
me in the detail as a mark of disrespect to me, although
it was not my time to be placed on detail duty according
to the system of rotating that duty.
Our detail worked very hard for about
two hours and seeing no prospect of dinner we crossed
over into San Francisco to find something to eat.
We found our regiment just ready to enjoy a grand banquet
prepared by the Red Cross Society. It was prepared
near the piers in a long stone building; long tables
were piled full of all that a crowd of hungry soldiers
could wish for, excellent music was furnished while
we did full justice to the feast before us. The
Red Cross has spent a great deal of money since the
commencement of the Spanish-American war; it has accomplished
much toward softening the horrors of war by caring
for the sick and wounded, providing medicines and
necessaries for their relief, and doing many charitable
acts too numerous to be enumerated here. Many
men to-day enjoying health and strength were rescued
from what must have been an untimely grave had not
the work of the Red Cross come to their relief when
sick or wounded. The army physician frequently
was a heartless, and apparently indifferent man about
the ills of his patients. While at Camp Merritt
I was sick for a month. The physician pronounced
the malady fever; he did not seem to care about my
recovery or that of any other man; his chief concern
seemed to be that of obtaining his salary of one hundred
and twenty-five dollars per month. Beyond this
his interest seemed to cease, and if a sick soldier
recovered he was considered lucky.
There were many sick men in Camp Merritt
in the months of June and July. We were stationed
there for five months.
Twenty-five men, myself included,
volunteered to be transferred from Company “A”
to Company “E.” This transfer was
made on the sixth of June, and was done to fill up
Company “E” to its full quota for the purpose
of going to Manila on the transport Colon, which was
to leave San Francisco on the fifteenth of June.
My company, now Company “E,”
was being prepared by Captain Pratt, and was drilling
for the last time in the United States before going
to Manila. I unfortunately became ill and had
to be left at Camp Merritt to go over later.
It was sad news to me, for I wanted to go over with
this expedition.
One battalion of the 23d Regiment
was left at Camp Merritt, which included my old company,
to which I was assigned. We stayed at Camp Merritt
until about the middle of August, when orders were
received to go to Manila. By the time everything
was packed and ready to strike tents a second order
was received, not to go to Manila, but to go to Presidio,
in San Francisco, and await further orders. About
the 10th of October, to our great joy, orders were
read out at parade in the evening, that we would start
to Manila on the seventeenth. The men were so
glad they threw up their hats and shouted for joy.
We were glad to leave the cold, foggy and disagreeable
climate of San Francisco, and delighted that we were
going to Manila, which was then the central battle
field.
The bad climate, incidentally mentioned,
of San Francisco seemed to be only local, extending
along the coast for only a few miles.
I have been in San Francisco when
it was cold enough to wear an overcoat, and going
across the bay to Oakland it was warm enough for a
man to be comfortable in his shirt sleeves. The
distance between these two points is only six miles.
The native citizens of San Francisco, and those who
have been residents for many years and accustomed to
the damp, foggy atmosphere, are very healthy.
But this climate was very detrimental
to the soldiers in Camp Merritt, and fatal to many.
While stationed in Camp Merritt I
spent a great deal of time in the San Francisco park,
which contained one thousand acres of land.
A great variety of wild animals and
many different kinds of birds were there, and I found
in it a great deal of interest and amusement.
Crowds of people were there every night. Many
people were there for the purpose of committing some
crime. People were frequently being sandbagged
and robbed, or sometimes boldly held up, and money
and valuables secured.
I knew a great many soldiers who were
robbed, sometimes they received bruised heads just
by loafing in the park at night.
No reflection is intended to be cast
upon the police whose duty was in the park; there
were a great many of them, but they did not know all
that was being done in the park, and it was necessary
for a man to keep a sharp lookout for himself if he
wished to escape uninjured.
The date of our departure the Red
Cross gave a fine dinner for all who were going to
leave the camp. This was the custom with that
society when any soldiers left there for the Philippines.
All those who left while I was there
partook of a splendid dinner just before leaving.
This society, in addition to the dinner
given to us, had several hundred dollars worth of
provisions put on board our transport, and all marked,
“For enlisted men only on deck.”
At three o’clock in the afternoon
of the seventeenth day of October, 1898, we sailed
on board the transport “Senator.”
The provisions put on board for us were well cared
for by the officers, who took charge of
them and guarded them so well that if an enlisted man
got any of them, he had to steal them from under a
guard. Actually had to steal what belonged to
him by gift, and if caught stealing them he was court
martialed, and fined enough to buy his rations for
a month, but the fine money was not appropriated in
that way.
We had a rough voyage, not on account
of the weather, but because the transport was so packed
and crowded that a man did well to walk from one end
of the ship to the other. We were crowded like
a cargo of animals bound for a slaughter pen.
A private may think all or anything
he pleases, but he does not have an opportunity to
say very much about anything. He must obey the
commands of his officers.
Our officers on the transport had
everything to suit themselves, and the private had
to do the best he could and try to be satisfied, or
at least appear that way.
It would take two-thirds of the deck
for half a dozen officers to have room. They
thought themselves so superior to the privates they
did not want to be near them. Our ship had fifteen
hundred men on board.
We reached the port of Honolulu, after
several days’ sailing on rough seas, October
twenty-fifth; five days were taken to coal for our
long voyage to Manila. Honolulu is a fine city,
about 2,190 miles from San Francisco. Located
as it is, away out in the Pacific Ocean, makes it the
more attractive to a Georgia soldier who was on his
first sea voyage. There are some fine views in
and around Honolulu. As our transport steamed
into the harbor of the city I thought it a grand sight.
From what I could learn I had but one objection to
it as a desirable place to live leprosy
is too prevalent. A small island is used for the
lepers’ home, where all who are afflicted with
this most loathsome of diseases are carried, yet the
fact that those poor victims are in that country is
a disagreeable one and makes one shudder to look at
the island. No one is allowed to go there, except
on business, and they have to get passes from the
authorities to do so. I had no desire to visit
the place.
Honolulu is a very good city, with
some of the modern city improvements, such as water
works, electric lights, street railroads and ice factories.
These are the results of emigration, people of other
countries going in with money and experience.
The natives are called Kanakis. Agriculture consists
in the cultivation of rice, bananas, cocoanuts and
coffee. It was there where I first saw bananas,
cocoanuts and coffee growing. A lieutenant, with
about twenty-five men, including myself, went out
about six miles along the beach. We went to the
Diamond Head, six miles eastward from Honolulu.
This is an old crater of an extinct volcano.
Returning to the beach we went in bathing and enjoyed
it very much.
Our party had to get passes and present
them to guards on going out and returning. Our
transport having coaled and made all the necessary
preparations for the voyage to Manila, we went on board
and sailed about four o’clock in the afternoon
of October the thirtieth. But few of the soldiers
had been sea-sick before arriving at Honolulu, but
after leaving there many of them were ill for several
days.
I think that the native drink called
swipes was the cause of much of it. This had
been very freely imbibed by the soldiers. It is
a peculiar beverage, producing a drunkenness that
lasted several days. Some of the men getting
over a drunk on this stuff, by taking a drink of water
would again be drunk. I escaped sea-sickness
and, but for the fact that we were living on the transport
like pigs in a crowded pen, I would have gone over
comfortably and would have enjoyed the voyage.
Our rations were very poor, scarcely
fit for hogs to eat. They consisted of a stewed
stuff of beef scraps, called by the men “slum;”
prunes, hard tack and colored hot water for coffee.
Once a week we had a change from this of salmon or
cod fish. I believe those who shared this food
stuff with me on this voyage will bear me out in the
statement that it was tough fare.
The soldiers were not alone on board there
were other passengers who seemed to dispute our possession
and waged war on us both day and night. These
belligerents were known as “gray backs,”
some of them being nearly one-fourth of an inch long
and very troublesome. Clothing and everything
else seemed to be full of them.
I have seen soldiers pick them off
of their bodies and clothing and kill them before
the men went to bed, hoping to get rid of them and
get to sleep.
I have seen several times almost the
whole body of soldiers on board sick and vomiting.
There was something peculiar about this sickness.
Nevertheless, it was true; the men were fed on rotten
prunes and fruit, which, after nearly all the supply
was consumed, was found by our surgeon to be full
of worms. This had been the cause of so much
sickness. By refusing to eat this rotten stuff
myself I was not ill.
About half way between Honolulu and
Manila an active volcano was passed about four o’clock
in the morning. Everybody went out on deck to
see this great sight. Although it was raining
at the time the men stood out in it to see this remarkable
spectacle. It had the appearance of a round hill
sticking out of the water, the whole top burning and
falling in.