From Canal Boy to President eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 216 pages of information about From Canal Boy to President.

From Canal Boy to President eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 216 pages of information about From Canal Boy to President.

The first fortnight was up, and Thomas was expected home.  No one was more anxious to see him than his little brother, and that was why Jimmy had come out from his humble home, and was looking so earnestly across the clearing.

At last he saw him, and ran as fast as short legs could carry him to meet his brother.

“Oh, Tommy, how I’ve missed you!” he said.

“Have you, Jimmy?” asked Thomas, passing his arm around his little brother’s neck.  “I have missed you too, and all the family.  Are all well?”

“Oh, yes.”

“That is good.”

As they neared the cabin Mrs. Garfield came out, and welcomed her oldest boy home.

“We are all glad to see you, Thomas,” she said.  “How have you got along?”

“Very well, mother.”

“Was the work hard?”

“The hours were pretty long.  I had to work fourteen hours a day.”

“That is too long for a boy of your age to work,” said his mother anxiously.

“Oh, it hasn’t hurt me, mother,” said Thomas, laughing.  “Besides, you must remember I have been well paid.  What do you say to that?”

He drew from his pocket twelve silver half-dollars, and laid them on the table, a glittering heap.

“Is it all yours, Tommy?” asked his little brother wonderingly.

“No, it belongs to mother.  I give it to her.”

“Thank you, Thomas,” said Mrs. Garfield, “but at least you ought to be consulted about how it shall be spent.  Is there anything you need for yourself?”

“Oh, never mind me!  I want Jimmy to have a pair of shoes.”

Jimmy looked with interest at his little bare feet, and thought he would like some shoes.  In fact they would be his first, for thus far in life he had been a barefooted boy.

“Jimmy shall have his shoes,” said Mrs. Garfield; “when you see the shoemaker ask him to come here as soon as he can make it convenient.”

So, a few days later the shoemaker, who may possibly have had no shop of his own, called at the log-cabin, measured Jimmy for a pair of shoes, and made them on the spot, boarding out a part of his pay.

The first pair of shoes made an important epoch in Jimmy Garfield’s life, for it was decided that he could now go to school.

CHAPTER II.

Growing in wisdom and stature.

The school was in the village a mile and a half away.  It was a long walk for a little boy of four, but sometimes his sister Mehetabel, now thirteen years old, carried him on her back.  When in winter the snow lay deep on the ground Jimmy’s books were brought home, and he recited his lessons to his mother.

This may be a good time to say something of the family whose name in after years was to become a household word throughout the republic.  They had been long in the country.  They were literally one of the first families, for in 1636, only sixteen years after the Pilgrims landed on Plymouth rock, and the same year that Harvard College was founded, Edward Garfield, who had come from the edge of Wales, settled in Watertown, Massachusetts, less than four miles from the infant college, and there for more than a century was the family home, as several moss-grown headstones in the ancient graveyard still testify.

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From Canal Boy to President from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.