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Twenty Years in Europe / A Consul-General's Memories of Noted People, with Letters From General W. T. Sherman cover

Twenty Years in Europe / A Consul-General's Memories of Noted People, with Letters From General W. T. Sherman

Chapter 36: Transcriber’s Notes
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About This Book

A U.S. consul-general recounts roughly twenty years of residence in Switzerland and Italy, drawing on diary entries and recollections to weave travel sketches, diplomatic incidents, and social reminiscences. The narrative alternates descriptive tours of Alpine landscapes and European cities with portraits of public figures, cultural encounters, and eyewitness notes on wars and political change. Interspersed letters from a celebrated American general offer private impressions of military life and opinion. Chapters also discuss press controversies, artistic circles, consular duties, and anecdotes from banquets, funerals, and railway and tunnel travel.

FOOTNOTES

1 “Switzerland and the Swiss.”

2 A detailed description of the incidents of the adventure within the lines of the enemy appeared in the Atlantic Monthly, May, 1880, and is repeated in Mr. Byers’ “Last Man of the Regiment.”

3 Note.​--​The second edition of this book was printed under my own name. It is the volume from which Boyd Winchester, in his “Swiss Republic,” borrowed so astoundingly, later, forgetting both my name, and the common use all but literary burglars make of quotation marks. Hepworth Dixon, though dead, and un-named, lives on in the book of Mr. Winchester in the same manner.

4 Details of this incident are related in Mr. Byers’ “Last Man of the Regiment.”

5 It was almost his last public performance.

6 This boy, Hamilton Fish, grew to manhood, and was the first American soldier killed for his country on Cuban soil.

7 The State Department also sent me a letter later, thanking me for my zeal. The publicity I gave to the outrages going on, has also led the Swiss Parliament to change its regulations as to immigration, while our own Congress has adopted severe measures against the traffic in paupers and criminals.

8 At last Mr. Sargent, tired and disgusted with the situation, resigned his post.

9 Harper’s Magazine No. 477.

10 This refers to the Century Co.’s “Battles and Leaders of the Civil War,” for which Mr. Byers was also invited to contribute his article describing Sherman’s Assault at Missionary Ridge, in which he was a participant.

11 A few evenings before, Secretary Windom had dropped dead while addressing a company of banqueters in New York.

12 A detailed sketch by me of this remarkable little Republic, appeared in Magazine of American History, December, 1891.

Transcriber’s Notes

Punctuation and spelling were made consistent when a predominant preference was found in this book; otherwise they were not changed.

Simple typographical errors were corrected; occasional unbalanced quotation marks retained.

Ambiguous hyphens at the ends of lines were retained.

Some illustrations have been moved closer to the pages or passages they reference.

Page 175: “employe” perhaps should be “employed”.