John Cabell Breckinridge, the 14th Vice President of the United States, who later commanded troops for the confederacy during the #CivilWar, died #OTD in 1875.🧵
Born into a prominent family in Lexington, KY, in 1821, Breckinridge received a law degree from @Transy University in 1841 and opened a law practice. He left that practice in 1847, and was commissioned as a Major in the 3rd Kentucky Infantry for service in the war with Mexico.
The unit saw no combat, but was part of the occupation force for 6 months. Upon returning to Kentucky and leaving the Army, Breckinridge entered politics, being elected to the Kentucky House of Representatives in 1849.
During this time, he visited with his cousin, Mary Todd, and met her husband, Abraham Lincoln. Though they disagreed politically, the two men became friends. After two years, Breckinridge was elected to the US House of Representatives from Kentucky’s 8th District.
He served two terms before being tapped as the candidate for Vice President on the Democratic Party ticket for the presidential election of 1856. When James Buchanan won that election, Breckinridge, at only 36 years old, became the youngest Vice President in US history.
Four years later, his term expired and having already been chosen by the Kentucky Legislature for a seat in the US Senate, Breckinridge became the nominee for President by the breakaway Southern Democrat Party for the presidential election of 1860.
In the fractious, four-way election, Breckinridge finished third in the popular vote, but second in the Electoral College after winning 11 southern states. His cousin’s husband, Abraham Lincoln, won the election, prompting most southern states to secede.
Breckinridge assumed his Senate seat since Kentucky remained in the Union, but he retained confederate sympathies and ultimately resigned to join the confederate army. He was officially declared a traitor by the Senate and expelled.
He was given command of a brigade, which became known as The Orphan Brigade, and served with distinction at the Battle of @ShilohNPS. Promoted to command a division, he saw action at @StonesRiverNPS, where a third of his division became casualties after a futile charge.
Furious with Braxton Bragg, who had ordered the attack, he nonetheless commanded a division under Bragg at @ChickamaugaNPS and was then given command of a corps during the Chattanooga Campaign.
There the bad blood between the men boiled over. After the defeat at Missionary Ridge, Bragg charged Breckinridge with drunkenness and relieved him. It was viewed as a false charge and didn’t stop Breckinridge from being given command of a small force in the Shenandoah Valley.
He drew comparisons to Thomas Jackson after victories at the Battles of New Market and Second Kernstown, and was then sent east with his division to join Robert E. Lee’s army outside Richmond. He commanded them at the Battle of Cold Harbor, where he was wounded.
He returned to hold several smaller independent commands before becoming the confederate Secretary of War. In that role, he helped negotiate the surrender of Joseph Johnston’s army to Gen. William T. Sherman before commandeering a boat and fleeing the country, ending up in Paris.
He remained abroad for over three years, returning only after an amnesty was declared for all former confederates. Settling back in Kentucky, he began practicing law again and also worked in the insurance and railroad industries.
Breckinridge refused several offers to return to politics. Suffering from cirrhosis due to liver injuries during the war, he passed away in his hometown of Lexington when he was only 54, and was buried in Lexington Cemetery.
General Ambrose Burnside was born #OTD in 1824. A one time commander of the Army of the Potomac, Burnside was a genial man but a subpar commander. He entered politics after the #CivilWar, becoming Governor of Rhode Island and a U.S. Senator from that state.🧵
As a young officer, Burnside had been engaged to a woman named Charlotte “Lottie” Moon, but she left him at the altar by proclaiming “No siree Bob!” to the minister’s question of whether she took Burnside to be her husband. She later became a confederate spy.
Burnside left two more lasting legacies. First, he wore such unusual whiskers that they began to be commonly called “burnsides”, which later evolved into the word “sideburns”. The second was his election as the first president of the National Rifle Association.
The Battle of Front Royal, VA, was fought #OTD in 1862. The engagement was part of Thomas Jackson’s campaign in the Shenandoah Valley, capturing supplies and tying up @USArmy units from reinforcing General George McClellan’s offensive against Richmond. #CivilWar🧵
General Nathaniel Banks commanded 9,000 men in the Valley, and concentrated near Strasbourg. A smaller force of about 1,000 under Colonel John Kenly held Front Royal, which Jackson approached on the morning of May 23rd.
Jackson had more than three times as many men as Kenly, and used the rest of his force well to cut off mountain passes and prevent U.S. reinforcements, including Banks’ main body, from reaching Front Royal.
The Battle of North Anna began #OTD in 1864. Part of General @USGrantNPS's Overland Campaign, the battle was actually a series of engagements between parts of The Army of the Potomac and Robert E. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia. #CivilWar🧵
After Grant was unable to defeat Lee at the two-week long Battle of Spotsylvania Court House, he met with his commanders and determined to move the army around Lee's flank to the south, hoping again to draw him into a full-scale battle on open ground.
Lee, with interior lines of movement, was able to shift his army southward and arrive at the North Anna River before Grant. Once across, Lee didn't have his men entrench, not knowing if Grant intended to confront them there. This gave Grant's two lead Corps an opportunity.
The War Department issued General Order No. 143 #OTD in 1863. It created the Bureau of Colored Troops and authorized the organization, recruitment and training of the United States Colored Troops for service in the #CivilWar, replacing the state level units created to that point.
Representative Preston Brooks beat Senator Charles Sumner with a cane on the floor of the US Senate #OTD in 1856. The violent attack is considered a key turning point in the breakdown of discussion between abolitionists and pro-slavery groups in the years before the #CivilWar.🧵
Two days earlier, Sumner had given a lengthy speech critical of slaveholders and of the politicians responsible for the Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854, including Brooks' cousin, Senator Andrew Butler.
Brooks was enraged at the insult to his family. After consulting with two colleagues, Reps. Laurence Keitt and Henry Edmundson, Brooks determined that Sumner was not worthy of challenging to an honorable duel, and instead determined to humiliate him by beating him publicly.
Albert Gallatin Jenkins died #OTD in 1864. Born in 1830 to wealthy parents on a plantation in Cabell County, near what is now Huntington, WV, Jenkins attended @marshallu and graduated from @wjcollege in 1848 before completing a law degree at @Harvard_Law in 1850.🧵
He opened a law practice in Charleston, WV, and was elected as a Democrat to the US House of Representatives in 1856, and again in 1858. Upon his father's death, he inherited his plantation, Green Bottom, in 1859.
At the outbreak of the #CivilWar, despite coming from the part of Virginia that separated and remained loyal to the United States, Jenkins elected to resign from Congress and raise troops for the confederate army. He became commander of the 8th Virginia Cavalry.