River than Gorgona. There I found an impecunious
American who had taken the contract to furnish transportation
for the regiment at a stipulated price per hundred
pounds for the freight and so much for each saddle
animal. But when we reached Cruces there was
not a mule, either for pack or saddle, in the place.
The contractor promised that the animals should be
on hand in the morning. In the morning he said
that they were on the way from some imaginary place,
and would arrive in the course of the day. This
went on until I saw that he could not procure the
animals at all at the price he had promised to furnish
them for. The unusual number of passengers that
had come over on the steamer, and the large amount
of freight to pack, had created an unprecedented demand
for mules. Some of the passengers paid as high
as forty dollars for the use of a mule to ride twenty-five
miles, when the mule would not have sold for ten dollars
in that market at other times. Meanwhile the
cholera had broken out, and men were dying every hour.
To diminish the food for the disease, I permitted
the company detailed with me to proceed to Panama.
The captain and the doctors accompanied the men,
and I was left alone with the sick and the soldiers
who had families. The regiment at Panama was
also affected with the disease; but there were better
accommodations for the well on the steamer, and a
hospital, for those taken with the disease, on an
old hulk anchored a mile off. There were also
hospital tents on shore on the island of Flamingo,
which stands in the bay.
I was about a week at Cruces before transportation
began to come in. About one-third of the people
with me died, either at Cruces or on the way to Panama.
There was no agent of the transportation company at
Cruces to consult, or to take the responsibility of
procuring transportation at a price which would secure
it. I therefore myself dismissed the contractor
and made a new contract with a native, at more than
double the original price. Thus we finally reached
Panama. The steamer, however, could not proceed
until the cholera abated, and the regiment was detained
still longer. Altogether, on the Isthmus and
on the Pacific side, we were delayed six weeks.
About one-seventh of those who left New York harbor
with the 4th infantry on the 5th of July, now lie
buried on the Isthmus of Panama or on Flamingo island
in Panama Bay.
One amusing circumstance occurred while we were lying
at anchor in Panama Bay. In the regiment there
was a Lieutenant Slaughter who was very liable to
sea-sickness. It almost made him sick to see
the wave of a table-cloth when the servants were spreading
it. Soon after his graduation, Slaughter was
ordered to California and took passage by a sailing
vessel going around Cape Horn. The vessel was
seven months making the voyage, and Slaughter was
sick every moment of the time, never more so than
while lying at anchor after reaching his place of