- Williams Carter Wickham
Infobox Military Person
name= Williams Carter Wickham
born= birth date|1820|9|21
died= death date and age|1888|7|23|1820|9|21
caption=
nickname=
placeofbirth=Richmond, Virginia
placeofdeath=
placeofburial=
allegiance=Confederate States of America
branch=Confederate Army
serviceyears= 1861–64
rank= Brigadier General
unit=
commands=
battles=American Civil War -First Battle of Bull Run -Battle of Williamsburg -Battle of Antietam -Battle of Chancellorsville -Battle of Gettysburg -Battle of Yellow Tavern
awards=
relations=
laterwork= C.S.A. CongressmanWilliams Carter Wickham (
September 21 ,1820 –July 23 ,1888 ) was a lawyer, judge, politician, and an important Confederatecavalry general who fought in theVirginia campaigns during theAmerican Civil War . After the war, he held various political posts and was the President of theChesapeake and Ohio Railway company.Early life and career
Wickham was the son of William Fanning Wickham and Anne Butler (née Carter)Wickham. His paternal grandfather was John Wickham, the constitutional lawyer. On his mother's side, he descended from historic roots, as the Nelson and Carter families were each
First Families of Virginia , prominent in theVirginia Colony .Wickham's great-grandfather, Gen.
Thomas Nelson, Jr. , was one of the signatories of theDeclaration of Independence and aGovernor of Virginia during the American Revolutionary War. Other ancestors includeThomas "Scotch Tom" Nelson who was one of the founders of Yorktown in the late 17th century. He was also a descendant of Robert "King" Carter (1663–1732), who served as an acting royal governor of Virginia and was one of its wealthiest landowners in the late 17th and early 18th centuries. His mother was a first cousin ofRobert E. Lee , whose mother Anne Hill (née Carter) Lee, was born atShirley Plantation . [ http://www.jamesriverplantations.org/Shirley.html ]Wickham was born in
Richmond, Virginia , but spent much of his youth on his father's 3,200 acreplantation , Hickory Hill, which is located about 20 miles north of Richmond and 5 miles east of Ashland in Hanover County. Hickory Hill was long an outlying appendage to Shirley Plantation, much of it having come into possession of the Carter family by a deed dated March 2, 1734. [ http://www.oldandsold.com/articles11/virginia-homes-43.shtml ]Wickham was graduated from the
University of Virginia and was admitted to the bar in 1842. He was married to Lucy Penn Taylor and had several children. He became a justice and was elected to theVirginia House of Delegates in 1849. [ http://ead.lib.virginia.edu/vivaead/published/lva/vi00552.document ]In 1858 he was commissioned
captain of Virginia volunteermilitia cavalry , and in 1861 he was elected by the people of Henrico County to the state convention as a Unionist, where he voted against the articles ofsecession . [ http://politicalgraveyard.com/geo/VA/HV.html ]Civil War
Following the secession of Virginia, Wickham took his company, the Hanover Dragoons, into the service of the
Confederate States Army . After participating in theFirst Battle of Manassas , Wickham was commissioned by GovernorJohn Letcher as lieutenant colonel of the Fourth Virginia Cavalry in September 1861. OnMay 4 ,1862 , he incurred a severe saber wound during a cavalry charge at theBattle of Williamsburg . In this state of injury, he was captured, but quickly paroled. In August 1862, he was commissionedColonel of the Fourth Virginia Cavalry. At theBattle of Sharpsburg , he was wounded again, this time in the neck by a shell fragment. Recovering, he participated in the battles of Chancellorsville and Gettysburg.Wickham was commissioned brigadier general on
September 9 ,1863 , and put in command of Wickham's brigade ofFitzhugh Lee 's division. OnMay 11 ,1864 , he fought at theBattle of Yellow Tavern . Maj. Gen.J.E.B. Stuart was mortally wounded during this engagement, with his final order being: "Order Wickham to dismount his brigade and attack." In September 1864, after the Confederate defeat at theBattle of Fisher's Hill , Wickham blocked at Milford an attempt by Maj. Gen.Philip Sheridan to encircle and destroy the Confederate forces of Maj. Gen.Jubal Anderson Early . He then attacked the Federal cavalry at Waynesboro and forced them to retreat to Bridgewater.Wickham resigned his commission on
October 5 ,1864 , and took his seat in theSecond Confederate Congress , to which he had been elected while in the field. Recognizing that the days of the Confederacy were over, he participated in theHampton Roads Conference in an attempt to bring an early end to the war.Postbellum activities
After the surrender of the Confederacy, Wickham was active in improving harmony between the states and reorganizing Virginia's economy, which had been ruined by the war. He became a Republican and voted in 1872 for General
Ulysses S. Grant as a member of theElectoral College of Virginia.In November 1865, at the conclusion of the War, he was elected president of the
Virginia Central Railroad , which had been one of the most heavily damaged during the War. In 1868, when the Virginia Central merged with theCovington and Ohio Railroad to form the new Chesapeake and Ohio, Wickham was retained as the new company's president. In the new capacity, he was anxious to complete a railroad line to theOhio River , long a dream of Virginians. [ http://ead.lib.virginia.edu/vivaead/published/vt/viblbv00240.bioghist ] However, unlike fellow Confederate officer and railroad leaderWilliam Mahone had done, he was unable to secure capital or financing in Virginia, or from Europeans. Turning toNew York City , he was successful in attracting an investment group headed byCollis P. Huntington . Fresh from recent completion of the western portion of the U.S.transcontinental railroad as a member of the so called "Big Four", Huntington joined the effort, became the C&O's new president. His contacts and reputation helped obtain $15 million of funding from New York financiers for the project, which eventually cost $23 million to complete. The final spike ceremony for the 428-mile long line from Richmond to the Ohio River was held onJanuary 29 ,1873 atHawk's Nest railroad bridge in theNew River Valley , near the town of Ansted inFayette County, West Virginia . [ http://www.wva-usa.com/history/mthope/cando.php ] After Huntington assumed the presidency, Wickham served as vice-president of the C&O from 1869 to 1878, when the company went into foreclosure, with Wickham as receiver. In 1878 the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad was sold under foreclosure and reorganized as the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway Company, with Collis P. Huntington assuming the office of President of the reorganized road; Wickham was named second vice-president. Under their leadership, an additional line was extended east from Richmond through the newChurch Hill Tunnel and down theVirginia Peninsula through Williamsburg to reachcoal pier s located on the harborHampton Roads , the East Coast of the United State's largestice-free port at the small unincorporated town of Newport News in Warwick County. During the ten years from 1878 to 1888, C&O's coal resources began to be developed and shipped eastward. Coal became a staple of the C&O's business at that time, and still was over 125 years later under successorCSX Transportation . The man Wickham brought to Virginia, Collis P. Huntington, went on to develop his holdings in Newport News, where he began theNewport News Shipbuilding and Drydock Company and helped the small community become one of only two in Virginia to become anindependent city without first having been anincorporated town .In modern times, Newport News, whuich merged with the former Warwick County in 1958, has grown to become one of theSeven Cities of Hampton Roads .Throughout the years after the Civil War, while developing railroads, Wickham also maintained an active political life. He maintained his offices in Richmond and his residence in Hanover County. He was elected chairman of the
Hanover County, Virginia Board of Supervisors in 1871 and as a Senator in the upper house of theVirginia General Assembly in 1883. He was an officer of the C&O and held all of these other positions at the time of his death onJuly 23 ,1888 at his office in Richmond.Death, legacy
Wickham was interred in Hickory Hill Cemetery near
Ashland, Virginia . [ http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=11109 ] A statue of Williams Carter Wickham was given to the City of Richmond by the general's comrades and employees of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway in 1891 and was placed inMonroe Park . [ http://www.discoverrichmond.com/dis/travel/attractions/statues_monuments/article/richmonds_best_known_statues/1196/ ]References
*Evans, Clement A., "Confederate Military History", Volume III, 1899.
* [http://members.aol.com/jweaver300/grayson/wickham.htm On-line biography]External links
* [http://members.aol.com/jweaver300/grayson/wickham.htm W. C. Wickham online biography]
* [http://www.cohs.org/ Chesapeake and Ohio Historical Society]
* [http://members.cox.net/wsimonton/ Steam Operations of the Chesapeake & Ohio Railway at Hinton, West Virginia]
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