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Sign up freeThe Jamesburg Record
Jamesburg, Middlesex County, New Jersey
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Anecdote of Generals Grant and Hancock during a night alarm: Hancock, wounded from Gettysburg, reacts dramatically to firing by calling for his horse, while Grant calmly whittles and dismisses it as one-sided, highlighting their contrasting temperaments. From General Horace Porter in Century.
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When Hancock's headquarters were reached, the party remained with him for some time, awaiting the arrival of the head of Warren's troops. Hancock's wound received at Gettysburg had not thoroughly healed, and he suffered such inconvenience from it when in the saddle that he had applied for permission to ride in a spring ambulance while on the march and when his troops were not in action. He was reclining upon one of the seats of the ambulance, conversing with General Grant, who had dismounted and was sitting on the ground with his back against a tree, whittling a stick, when the sound of firing broke forth directly in front. Hancock sprang up, seized his sword, which was lying near him, buckled it around his waist and cried, "My horse, my horse!" The scene was intensely dramatic and recalled vividly to the bystanders the cry of Richard III on the field of Bosworth. Grant listened a moment without changing his position or ceasing his whittling and then remarked: "They are not fighting. The firing is all on one side. It takes two sides to start a fight." In a few minutes the firing died away, and it was found that the enemy was not advancing. The incident fairly illustrates the contrast in the temperaments of these two distinguished soldiers. -General Horace Porter in Century.
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During a night alarm near Hancock's headquarters, wounded General Hancock reacts dramatically to firing by arming himself and calling for his horse, evoking Richard III, while General Grant remains calmly seated whittling and observes it's one-sided firing, not a real fight; the incident highlights their differing temperaments.