I am sure he recalls your gallant conduct After the line started on the advance from the first hill, I did not see you until our line was halted, under a most galling fire, at the extreme front, where you afterward intrenched, I spoke to you there and gave instructions from General Sumner that the position was to be held and that there would be no further advance till further orders. You were the senior officer there, took charge of the line, scolded me for having my horse so high up on the ridge; at the same time you were exposing yourself most conspicuously while adjusting the line, for the example was necessary, as was proved when several colored soldiers—about eight or ten, Twenty-fourth Infantry men, I think—started at a run to the rear to assist a wounded colored soldier, and you drew your, revolver and put short and effective stop to such apparent stampede—it quieted them. That position was hot, and now I marvel at your escaping there.…
Very sincerely yours,
Robert L. Howze.
West Point, N. Y.,
December 17, 1898.
I hereby certify that on July 1, 1898, Colonel (then Lieutenant-Colonel) Theodore Roosevelt,