Albany, as we passed along through the Berkshire Hills, we
realized we were in the old Bay State again and that it was midwinter. The
ground was buried deeply under the snow and the air was cold. Wherever we
stopped on our way east we were warmly received. At Worcester the
reception was enthusiastic. The 21st was the first three years' regiment
to re-enlist in the 9th Army Corps. It was the first veteran regiment to
return to Worcester County, and if not the first, it was one of the first,
to return to the state. The people of Worcester appreciated this and
turned out in large numbers to welcome us home. At the railroad station
the mayor and a committee of citizens and a throng of people greeted us.
The official reception February 1st, was a most enthusiastic affair. A
parade containing every organization of any size in the city was formed,
with the mayor and city government at the head. We paraded the streets of
the city; Plunkett marching beside the colors. Then in the afternoon there
was a meeting in Mechanics Hall with speeches of welcome, etc. Our
furloughs were for thirty days and were dated February 1st. The next day
we were off for our homes and a glorious vacation. I got as far as Barre
the second, stayed all night at the hotel, and the next morning hired a
team and drove over to Dana. The place looked natural and every one seemed
happy. Riding about, visiting friends, attending reunions, dancing parties
and balls, was now the order of the day and of the night. What a vacation!
What a season of pleasure! It was of its kind the most delightful time of
my life. Nehemiah Doubleday invited my sister Jane and I and a few other
close personal friends up to his house for an evening. They had music,
served refreshments, and we had a most delightful time. My sister, Mrs.
Kent did the same thing, and there we spent another very enjoyable
evening. The town of Hardwick gave an entertainment of welcome to the
boys from that town in our regiment. I had worked for Mr. Arad Walker of
that town and had a lot of friends over there, and so I was invited and
went, and had a most royal time. Such cordiality on the part of the
people. Such a warmth of welcome was entirely unexpected. Some one of
those Hardwick men had his arm around me all the evening. I never got out
of the sight of Mr. Walker while there. Every time I met Mr. John Paige he
would put both his arms around me and give me a hug. Rev. Mr. Sanger could
not have treated a
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