A Mountain Adventure
Few men in the Secret Service have attained a higher reputation or encountered more perils that Ambrose Beckham. I knew him for years before I could ever prevail on him to recount any of his adventures; but meeting him in Boston, about a year ago, I succeeded in getting several interesting stories from him, among them the following, which he related in his modest way:
Not many summers ago, well executed fifty-cent notes were widely circulated in the Southwest, and for a time all efforts to trace them to their source were in vain. Four detectives—Messrs. Melhorn, Wilson, Baird and myself—had followed a fancied clue to Knoxville, Tennessee, where all trace disappeared. My companions were convinced that we were on a false scent, and resolved to depart for Richmond, Virginia, from which base they had reason to believe they could work successfully. I did not share their views, and remained in Knoxville, with an understanding that we should communicate by telegraph, in cipher.
They departed, and had barely time to reach Richmond, when, just as I was beginning to grow discouraged, I made a discovery that led me to believe—in fact to feel sure—that that the skillful counterfeiting was not done in any city or large town, as we had conjectured, but in the mountains of Eastern Tennessee or Western North Carolina. I immediately sent an explanatory dispatch to my friends in Richmond, and started southeastward, intending… Read More