FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   1665   1666   1667   1668   1669   1670   1671   1672   1673   1674   1675   1676   1677   1678   1679   1680   1681   1682   1683   1684   1685   1686   1687   1688   1689  
1690   1691   1692   1693   1694   1695   1696   1697   1698   1699   1700   1701   1702   1703   1704   1705   1706   1707   1708   1709   1710   1711   1712   1713   1714   >>   >|  
where I knew him slightly. In the fall of 1861 he became colonel of the Eighth Pennsylvania Cavalry, and a year later was made a brigadier-general. He then succeeded to the command of a division of cavalry, and continued in that position till the close of his service, at times temporarily commanding the Cavalry Corps. He was the only division commander I had whose experience had been almost exclusively derived from the cavalry arm. Wilson graduated in 1860 in the Topographical Engineers, and was first assigned to duty in Oregon, where he remained till July, 1861. In the fall of that year his active service in the war began, and he rose from one position to another, in the East and West, till, while on General Grant's staff, he was made a brigadier-general in the fall of 1863 in reward for services performed during the Vicksburg campaign and for engineer duty at Chattanooga preceding the battle of Missionary Ridge. At my request he was selected to command the Third Division. General Grant thought highly of him, and, expecting much from his active mental and physical ability, readily assented to assign him in place of General Kilpatrick. The only other general officers in the corps were Brigadier-General Wesley Merritt, Brigadier-General George A. Custer, and Brigadier-General Henry E. Davies, each commanding a brigade. In a few days after my arrival at Brandy Station I reviewed my new command, which consisted of about twelve thousand officers and men, with the same number of horses in passable trim. Many of the general officers of the army were present at the review, among them Generals Meade, Hancock, and Sedgwick. Sedgwick being an old dragoon, came to renew his former associations with mounted troops, and to encourage me, as he jestingly said, because of the traditional prejudices the cavalrymen were supposed to hold against being commanded by an infantry officer. The corps presented a fine appearance at the review, and so far as the health and equipment of the men were concerned the showing was good and satisfactory; but the horses were thin and very much worn down by excessive and, it seemed to me, unnecessary picket duty, for the cavalry picket-line almost completely encircled the infantry and artillery camps of the army, covering a distance, on a continuous line, of nearly sixty miles, with hardly a mounted Confederate confronting it at any point. From the very beginning of the war the enemy had sho
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   1665   1666   1667   1668   1669   1670   1671   1672   1673   1674   1675   1676   1677   1678   1679   1680   1681   1682   1683   1684   1685   1686   1687   1688   1689  
1690   1691   1692   1693   1694   1695   1696   1697   1698   1699   1700   1701   1702   1703   1704   1705   1706   1707   1708   1709   1710   1711   1712   1713   1714   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

General

 

general

 
Brigadier
 

command

 

cavalry

 

officers

 

review

 

picket

 

horses

 

mounted


Sedgwick

 
infantry
 
active
 

brigadier

 
position
 
service
 

commanding

 

division

 

Cavalry

 

Hancock


confronting

 

dragoon

 

troops

 

encourage

 

Confederate

 

associations

 

number

 

thousand

 

consisted

 
twelve

passable

 

Generals

 
present
 

beginning

 

satisfactory

 
equipment
 

concerned

 
showing
 

distance

 
artillery

encircled

 

unnecessary

 

excessive

 
covering
 

health

 

cavalrymen

 
supposed
 

prejudices

 

traditional

 
jestingly