In 1935 at the behest of Charles Wellington Furlong, Vic Hurley was asked to write the biography of his younger brother, Captain Leonard Furlong, the legendary Philippine Constabulary Officer. It took close to thirty years for Hurley to write but neither man could find a publisher. After HurleyÕs death in 1978 the draft languished in a box with his sister-in-law, and then in 2011, one hundred years and one day after the death of Leonard Furlong it was brought back into the light. With the approval and support of Vic HurleyÕs niece this long-abandoned book is now published with extensive supplementary notes and period photographs. It draws on HurleyÕs own experience in the Philippines to provide a comprehensive context for Leonard FurlongÕs combat in the Philippines. It incorporates facts from the records and letters of Charles Wellington Furlong and family photographs to document Leonard FurlongÕs early years. The book also draws on military records to describe in detail FurlongÕs combat experiences in the Philippines and, perhaps most significantly, details and provides arguments about the circumstances that led to his tragic demise on July 9th, 1911, at thirty-three years of age.