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May 19 7 tweets 5 min read Twitter logo Read on Twitter
Felix Zollicoffer, a former Congressman and newspaper editor from Tennessee who joined the confederacy during the #CivilWar, was born #OTD in 1812. He and his wife Louisa, a direct descendant of Pocahontas, had 14 children, but only 6 survived past infancy.🧵 ImageImage
Though Zollicoffer did not support secession, he volunteered his service to the Provisional Army of Tennessee when it was formed. He had some brief experience in the @USArmy during the Second Seminole War, and so was named a brigadier general in the state’s army in July, 1861. Image
Named District Commander area of eastern Tennessee, Zollicoffer and his small force fought several small engagements with @USArmy forces over control of that part of the state as wells as Kentucky and the Cumberland Gap. ImageImageImage
In January 18, 1862, while commanding a brigade at the Battle of Mill Springs against a U.S. force led by General George Thomas, Zollicoffer mistook a U.S. officer for a confederate, rode out past his lines to meet him, and was shot and killed. ImageImageImage
A @USArmy surgeon embalmed his body, and it was respectfully returned to confederates forces. He’s buried in Nashville’s Old City Cemetery alongside his wife, who had passed away five years earlier. ImageImage

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More from @CivilWarOTD

May 21
The town of @lawrenceks was sacked #OTD in 1856 by pro-slavery forces led by the local sheriff, the US Marshal, and former US Senator David Rice Atchison. #CivilWar🧵 ImageImage
The town had been founded two years earlier by abolitionists from Massachusetts, backed by funding from the New England Emigrant Aid Company and from Amos Adams Lawrence, a wealthy philanthropist and @Harvard graduate after whom the town was named. ImageImageImage
It quickly became the center of the battle over allowing slavery in the Territory, and the "Bleeding Kansas" violence that would ensue. "Border ruffians", led by Atchison, had cast thousands of illegal votes the year before, electing a pro-slavery territorial government. ImageImage
Read 13 tweets
May 20
General William H. French died #OTD in 1881, at the age of 66. A member of the West Point Class of 1837, he had been commissioned as an artillery officer, and served in the Second Seminole War and the Mexican-American War as aide to General (later President) Franklin Pierce.🧵 ImageImageImageImage
French served mostly on the frontier, and at the outbreak of the #CivilWar was serving as a Captain in the 1st US Artillery at Fort Duncan, Texas. Rather than surrender his command to the local confederates, he marched them to the coast and sailed to Key West. ImageImageImage
Promoted first to Major, and then quickly to Brigadier General, by September, 1861, French commanded a brigade in the Army of the Potomac. He led it with distinction during the Peninsula Campaign, and was promoted to command a division during the Northern Virginia Campaign. ImageImageImage
Read 10 tweets
May 20
A @USArmy force under Colonel James Henry Carleton entered Tucson in the Territory of Arizona #OTD in 1862, ending a brief occupation by confederate forces without firing a shot. #CivilWar🧵 ImageImage
Originally part of the Territory of New Mexico, cities in the south of the territory had attempted to separate as a territory with legal slavery in the 1850’s but their petition was denied. After the Civil War began, the confederacy recognized the area as the Arizona Territory. Image
A small number of confederate troops arrived and occupied Tucson in March, 1862, ordered there by Henry Hopkins Sibley. They fought a pair of engagements with Apaches in the area, but ordered the town abandoned when they learned Carleton’s troops were approaching. ImageImage
Read 5 tweets
May 20
The Battle of Ware Bottom Church was fought #OTD in 1864. Part of the Bermuda Hundred Campaign, the battle was fought when eight confederate brigades under P.G.T. Beauregard attacked the @USArmy positions of General Benjamin Butler’s Army of the James. #CivilWar 🧵 ImageImageImage
It was a short, fierce engagement in which 1,400 of the 10,000 engaged troops became casualties. After it ended, Beauregard had his men construct the Howlett Line of defensive positions, further bottling up Butler’s larger force in the Bermuda Hundred Peninsula. ImageImageImageImage
Read 4 tweets
May 19
#OTD in 1856, Senator Charles Sumner of Massachusetts began a two-day speech on the floor of the Senate entitled “The Crime Against Kansas”, forcefully arguing for the admission of Kansas as a free state in which slavery would be illegal. #CivilWar🧵 ImageImage
He denounced slavery as well as the authors of the Kansas-Nebraska Act, including Sen. Andrew Butler of South Carolina, saying he had “chosen a mistress to whom he has made his vows..who though polluted in the sight of the world is chaste in his sight—I mean the harlot, slavery.” ImageImageImage
Days later, Butler’s cousin, Rep. Preston Brooks, attacked Sumner on the floor of the Senate, beating him with a cane to avenge the honor of his cousin who he felt Sumner had insulted. The attack further polarized the pro- and anti-slavery factions leading up to the Civil War.
Read 6 tweets
May 19
#OTD in 1864, after the failure of his assaults the previous two days, General @USGrantNPS made one final attempt to draw out and do battle with Robert E. Lee’s entrenched Army of Northern Virginia near Spotsylvania Court House. #CivilWar🧵 ImageImage
Grant ordered General Winfield Scott Hancock to take II Corps toward the Fredricksburg-Richmond Railroad, and then march south, hoping that Lee would send his army to intercept the isolated Corps and give Grant an opportunity to engage them before they could entrench again. ImageImage
Lee had his own plans. He’d ordered Richard Ewell to take his Corps north and east, to find the U.S. flank at that end of their line. Near the Harris Farm, also known as Bloomsbury Farm, Ewell’s men encountered U.S. Heavy Artillery units that had been converted to infantry. ImageImageImage
Read 7 tweets

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