Warwick’s Les Rolston, author of several books on the Civil War about ordinary people who do extraordinary things, will present a program based on his book “Long Time Gone: Neighbors Divided by …
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Warwick’s Les Rolston, author of several books on the Civil War about ordinary people who do extraordinary things, will present a program based on his book “Long Time Gone: Neighbors Divided by Civil War” on Sunday, April 28 at the carriage house of the Babcock-Smith House Museum, 124 Granite St., Westerly. His talk will start at 2 p.m.
His latest book is an epic story of two young Rhode Islanders – boyhood friends from the sleepy seaside village of Pawtuxet – who, as teenagers, fought in the Civil War on opposite sides.
Elisha Hunt Rhodes served with the 2nd Rhode Island Regiment while schoolmate James Rhodes Sheldon shouldered a musket in the 50th Georgia Infantry. What these two youngsters saw, felt and suffered through, makes for absolutely riveting reading.
Admission is $2; museum members are free.
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