The following narrative does not purport to be in any sense a battalion, company, or even a platoon history. It was written at odd times during the February and March following the A rmistice, with the double purpose of killing some of the time that hung heavy on our hands during that dull period of waiting, and of preserving for personal and family records the writers war experiences. It omits many of the most noteworthy things done by men of IC ompany and by other units simply because it is an eye-witness narrative a mere expanded diary and the writer did not happen to witness them. I ts only excuse for publication is the fact that it does bring in partial accounts of some of the greatest events in which the 320th Infantry took part, and glimpses of the lives and deaths of some of our comrades whose lives and deaths are worthy of record. Edward C. Lukens.
(Typographical errors above are due to OCR software and don't occur in the book.)
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