Henry Eustace McCulloch

Henry Eustace McCulloch

Henry Eustace McCulloch (1816 - 1895) was a soldier in the Texas Revolution, Texas Ranger, and brigadier general in the army of the Confederate States during the American Civil War.

Early life

He was born 6 December 1816 in Rutherford County, Tennessee, one of twelve children of Alexander McCulloh and Frances Fisher LeNoir. His father, a Yale University graduate, was an officer on Brig. Gen. John Coffee's staff during the Creek War of 1813 and 1814 in Alabama; his mother was a daughter of a prominent Virginia planter. The family had been wealthy, politically influential, and socially prominent in North Carolina before the American Revolution but Alexander had wasted much of his inheritance and was unable even to educate his sons. (Though two of Henry's older brothers had briefly attended a school in Tennessee taught by their neighbor, Sam Houston.) After several moves, the family finally settled at Dyersburg, where one of their closest neighbors was David Crockett — a great influence on both Henry and his older brother, Ben McCulloh, who also became a Confederate brigadier general and who was killed in action at the Battle of Pea Ridge, Arkansas, in 1862.

Texas career

Henry shared to some extent in Ben's economic endeavors in the early 1830s, including transporting goods by raft on the Mississippi, on one occasion all the way to New Orleans. When Crockett went to Texas in 1835, Henry followed the lead of his brother and he and Ben made plans to meet Crockett's Tennessee Boys at Nacogdoches on Christmas Day. Ben contracted measles, however, and was bedridden for several weeks. The two young men arrived too late at Nacogdoches and pressed on toward San Antonio, but the delay prevented them from arriving until the Alamo had already fallen.

In 1838, Henry and Ben McCulloh both were making a living as surveyors, but also were making their reputations as Indian-fighters. Both took part in the Battle Creek Fight against the Comanches in Navarro County, also known as "The Surveyors' Fight". In 1839, Henry McCulloch was included on the muster roll of Capt. Matthew Caldwell's "Gonzales Rangers". Also in 1839, Ben was elected to the Republic of Texas House of Representatives after a contentious campaign that included assorted slanders between the candidates. As a result, Ben fought a rifle duel with his opponent, Reuben Ross and received a permanently crippling wound in the arm. The matter was considered closed but it flared up again the following year, this time involving Henry, who killed Ross with a pistol.

On 20 August 1840, McCulloh married Jane Isabella Ashby, daughter of John Miller Ashby and Mary Harris Garnett of Kentucky, who had been early settlers in the DeWitt Colony, which was centered on Gonzales. They had twelve children, most of whom remained in Texas.

Later in 1840, McCulloch took part in the Battle of Plum Creek, acting as a scout against the Comanches and being wounded. When a Mexican raiding force under Gen. Adrian Woll invested San Antonio in September 1842, he served as 1st Lieutenant of a company of volunteers from Seguin. He again operated as a scout, including infiltrating enemy lines, and commanded a spy company at the Battle of Salado Creek. With his brother, Ben, he subsequently took part in the failed Somervell expedition and both men were ordered to leave shortly before most of the Texans were captured at Mier, Mexico in Tamaulipas, 25 December 1842.

He was elected sheriff of Gonzales in 1843 and also opened a mercantile business there. The following year, he moved his family permanently to Seguin.

There are several letters written in the 1890s (now in the possession of the Texas State Library) in which McCulloh describes his (and his brother's) activities during the Texas Revolution and under the Republic.

In December 1847, McCulloh was in command of a Ranger company in Burnet County and established what became Fort Croghan. When the War with Mexico began, he took command of a volunteer company patrolling the same area of the western frontier against Indian raids. He continued this service after the war as captain of a company of Texas Mounted Volunteers out of Fort Murrill, and also operating a Ranger post in Kimble County.

He served in both houses of the Texas Legislature from Guadalupe County, being elected to the House of Representatives in 1853 and the Senate in 1855. Among other subjects, he introduced bills to regulate the use by slaveowners of "manager slaves" and to acquire the Alamo as a state monument. He then received an appointment as U.S. marshal from President Buchanan for the eastern district of Texas, and was a delegate from Guadalupe County to the Texas secession convention in January 1861. {His brother Ben had been 1852 US Marshall for the eastern District of Texas}

Civil War

A few days after the convention voted for secession from the union on 1 February 1861 (though before the necessary referendum), the Texas Committee of Public Safety established a Provisional Army, in which McCulloh received a commission as colonel. On March 4, he was appointed commander of the 1st Texas Cavalry Regiment, also known (especially to its officers) as the 1st Texas Mounted Rifles. The unit was recruited from several counties in central Texas to serve for twelve months and was the first Texas cavalry regiment to enter Confederate service. Its mission was to maintain a line of patrol from the Red River southwest to the junction of the Concho and North Concho Rivers, a point near present-day San Angelo.

McCulloh was acknowledged by his superiors and others for his emphasis on precise discipline and gentlemanly conduct in his regiment. His training methods included complex cavalry and infantry maneuvers as well as sabre-fighting and the proper care of horses and equipment. Many Texas units maintained only lax rules of propriety and organization, but the 1st Texas remained a cohesive and loyal unit, disbanding only under the proper orders.

After receiving word of the action at Fort Sumter, McCulloh moved five companies to confront any federal troops remaining in Texas who had not yet embarked at the port of Indianola, but en route he received orders from Gen. Earl Van Dorn to intercept a federal force northwest of San Antonio. On May 9, MCulloh's troops, numbering some 1,300, captured the 8th U.S. Infantry near San Lucas Springs.

Late in June, McCulloh crossed the Red River with Maj. Edward Burleson to ensure the friendliness (or at least the neutrality) of the Wichita and Caddo Indians, following this with a warning that any raids across the river into Texas would bring retaliation -- and over the following year, there were in fact a number of engagements between elements of the 1st Texas and Indian raiding parties. The success of the Texas troops in suppressing these raids is shown in the fact that the number of raids actually decreased during 1861 and 1862 from the numbers reported in previous years.

In September 1861, McCulloh, now a brigadier general, assumed temporary command of the Department of Texas until the arrival of Gen. Paul O. Hébert, and in December was named to command the new Western Military District, comprising that part of the state west and south of San Antonio. Early the next year, he was ordered to assume co-command of Texas State Troops being sent to Arkansas.

On 6 September 1862, following the death near Little Rock of his co-commander, Allison Nelson of Waco, McCulloh took command of the new Texas Division and organized it into four brigades, ultimately taking command of the Third Brigade himself while the division as a whole was under the command of Gen. John G. Walker. The division was attached to the District of Arkansas, Trans-Mississippi Department, and by April 1863 it was in Louisiana, where it took part in the Red River Campaign, the Camden Expedition, and the Battle of Milliken's Bend, which was an early phase of the Vicksburg campaign. In July 1863, the division arrived in Alexandria, Louisiana, where McCulloh was replaced by Col. George Flournoy. McCulloh was approached as a candidate for governor of Texas late that summer, but declined in order to remain on active service.

In 1864 and 1865, McCulloh was again in north Texas and in charge of the Western Sub-District of Texas (the entire District now being under the command of Gen. John B. Magruder), where he was active not only in dealing with Indian raids but in pursuing and arresting Confederate deserters and bushwhackers. At the end of the war, on his return to his home in Seguin, he found it necessary to travel with an armed escort because of threats against his life by deserters. It should be noted that Henry E. and Benjamin McCulloh were the only brothers to serve as general officers in the Confederate army.

Postbellum career

In 1874, he was active early in the administration of Gov. Richard Coke, especially in helping to physically remove Edmund J. Davis from the executive offices. In 1876, as a reward for his services to Texas, he was appointed superintendent of the Deaf and Dumb Asylum (later the Texas School for the Deaf) in Austin. Though a respected military commander, he proved an inept civil administrator and a legislative investigation forced him to resign his position in 1879; he was succeeded in that office by Col. John S. "Rip" Ford, his old commander in the Rangers.

The retired general apparently enjoyed his retirement, frequently receiving distinguished visitors in his home, giving interviews and engaging in correspondence with inquiring historical writers, and was in regular demand as a speaker at July Fourth festivities throughout central Texas. He was also a trustee in the local Methodist Church. Henry E. McCulloh died 12 March 1895 at Rockport and was buried in San Geronimo Cemetery in Seguin. He received a full masonic funeral, having been an active freemason after the War in the Guadalupe County lodge. His widow, Jane Ashby McCulloh died in 1896.

Camp Henry McCulloh was located at "Nuner's Mott", about four miles north of the present city limits of Victoria in Victoria County. It was the training site in the fall of 1861 for several infantry and cavalry companies of the 6th Texas Infantry Regiment, CSA (at the time when McCulloch was interim commander of the Department of Texas). A Texas state historical marker was erected at the site.

The Gen. Henry E. McCulloh Camp #843 of the Sons of Confederate Veterans, Texas Division, Central Texas Brigade, is located in Brownwood, Texas.

ources & Additional Reading

* David Paul Smith. "Frontier Defense in the Civil War: Texas' Rangers and Rebels". College Station: Texas A&M University Press, 1992. (ISBN 0-89096-484-X)
* Walter Prescott Webb. "The Texas rangers: A Century of Frontier Defense". Boston: Houghton Mifflin 1935. (2nd edition, Austin: University of Texas Press, 1965)
* James K. Greer. "Colonel Jack Hayes: Texas Frontier Leader and California Builder". College Station: Texas A&M University Press, 1987. (ISBN 0-89096-294-4)
* William J. Hughes. "Rebellious Ranger: Rip Ford and the Old Southwest". Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1964. (ISBN 0-585-14869-4, electronic book)
* Stanley S. McGowen. "Horse Sweat and Powder Smoke: The First Texas Cavalry in the Civil War". College Station: Texas A&M University Press, 1999. (ISBN 0-89096-903-5)

External links

*Handbook of Texas|id=MM/fmc35|name=Henry Eustace McCulloh
* [http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/utcah/00126/cah-00126.html A Guide to the Ben and Henry Eustace McCulloh Family Papers, 1798-1961,] Center for American History, University of Texas at Austin
* [http://www.tsd.state.tx.us/overview/history001.htm Early History] from the Texas School for the Deaf
* [http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=9803 Henry McCulloh Find A Grave]


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