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UNDER FIRE AT ELEVEN.

_____________

General Lawton's Son Served Faithfully in the Manila Campaign.

from the Boston Globe (9/21/1901)

    LEXINGTON, Kentucky Sept. 21 - The Kentucky State Guard numbers among its' members the youngest individual that ever donned shoulder straps in the united States army or who has been under fire in battle.  This person is Capt. Manley Lawton, now but thirteen years old, the son of General H. W. Lawton, who fell at San Mateo while charging a Philippine stronghold across a rice field, who is now bugler for the First Battalion of artillery, Kentucky State Guard.

    At the tender age of eleven years this boy was on the firing line and under fire.  He went to the Philippines with his father and served in various commands until his father's death, in December, 1899.  Immediately upon his arrival in Manila, and before his father was given a command, this boy went with General MacArthur to the front, where they found themselves under fire.  General Lloyd Wheaton's brigade had advanced from San Pedro Macati to Guadalupe Ridge and encountered the enemy.  The courage displayed by this child while the battle raged was a matter of comment among the officers.

    Soon after this he was assigned to the position of volunteer aid on his father's staff, with the rank of captain.  He served faithfully and well, going through the entire campaign, taking part in all the expeditions and enduring the same hardships as others of the command.  Before starting on the long northern expedition with his father in Luzon, the result of which meant so much, he served for some time as aid to General Fred Grant while the latter was stationed in Bacoor.

    When General Lawton left Manila the night of December 18 for San Mateo it was the first time Manley did not accompany him.  The boy was not well and the storm was so great that the young soldier's mother detained him.  The next morning his father fell.  Manley returned to the States with his mother, whose mourning was that of the nation.

The mother has taken up her residence at Pewee Valley, near Louisville, where young Lawton is much admired by the citizens, being seen almost daily riding his Philippine pony which he brought to America.  He was much admired at the recent encampment of the State Guard at Owensboro, where he recited entertainingly to Gov. Beckham, General John B. Castleman, and other officials, his experiences in the Philippines.
 
    The records show young Lawton's assignments in the Philippine service as follows:  Arrived in Manila March 10, 1899.  Reported June 10 and tendered his services to the division at Las Pinas, June 13 present at the battle of Zapote River.  July 4 appointed captain and volunteer aid-de-camp.  Accompanied the division commander on launch and was present at the capture of Calamba, July 26.  August 9 was announced aid-de-camp to Brig.. General Fred Grant.  On August 9 he was directed, in addition to his other duties, to assist Capt. William M Ekin, brigade quartermaster, in charge of the repair of roads in the vicinity of Bacoor.  October 16 departed with the division commander on his expedition to the northern part of Luzon.

Note:  Kentucky Governor Beckham mentioned above had a  daughter, Eleanor, who drew two of the game playing pieces for the Little Colonel game!

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The Giant Scissors
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    The Little Colonel at Boarding-School
    The Little Colonel in Arizona
    The Little Colonel's Christmas Vacation 
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    The Little Colonel's Knight Comes Riding
 
    Mary Ware, The Little Colonel's Chum 
    Mary Ware in Texas  
    Mary Ware's Promised Land
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The People & Characters:
The Little Colonel, Papa Jack and Mrs. Sherman,  The Old Colonel, Two Little Knights of Kentucky,  Two Little Knights of Kentucky(2), 
Uncle Sidney & Aunt Elise, parents of the Two Little Knights of Kentucky, Grandmother McIntyre, Aunt Allison, The Waltons, Rob and Anna Moore, Betty, Joyce Ware, Jack WareMom Beck, Walker, Katherine Marks, Gay Melville, The Lees of Arizona, Small Parts
Their Final Resting Places

The Places:
In Pewee (Lloydsboro) Valley: Map, Map 2, Where it all began, The Locust, The Beeches  Edgewood, The Little Colonel's Cottage, The Railroad Station, "Lloydsboro Seminary", Clovercroft, The Post Office, Churches, The Haunted House at Hartwell Hollow,  Confederate Home Rollington, Minor Places In Old Louisville: The Culbertson Mansion, "Home of a Hero"  in Indiana:: The Cuckoo's Nest (Indiana), In Arizona: Lee's Ranch, Camelback Mountain & Hole-in-Rock, In Texas: 
San Antonio, The Little Town of Bauer (Boerne), Penacres, The Barnaby Ranch, In France: The Gate of the Giant Scissors
Letters from Annie Fellows Johnston and "Mrs Walton"  
Scrapbook

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