- William MacRae
Infobox Military Person
name= William MacRae
born=September 9 ,1834
died= Dda|1882|2|11|1834|9|9
caption=
nickname=
placeofbirth=Wilmington, North Carolina
placeofdeath=Augusta, Georgia
placeofburial=Oakdale Cemetery Wilmington, North Carolina
allegiance=Confederate States of America
branch=Confederate Army Confederate States Army Infantry
serviceyears= 1861-1865
rank= Brigadier General
unit=
commands=Pettigrew-Kirkland-MacRaeBrigade
battles=American Civil War
*Peninsula Campaign
*Second Manassas
*Maryland Campaign
**Battle of Antietam
*Battle of Fredericksburg
*Battle of Bristoe Station
*Overland Campaign
*Siege of Petersburg
*Appomattox Campaign
awards=
relations=
laterwork= Railroad superintendentWilliam MacRae (September 9, 1834-February 11, 1882) was a brigadier general in the Confederate States Army during the American Civil War.
Early life
William MacRae was born September 9, 1834, in Wilmington, NC a son of General Alexander MacRae and Anna Jane Martin MacRae. His family was descended from the clan MacRae, of Rosshire,
Scotland . MacRae was educated incivil engineering . He was working in the profession atMonroe, NC when the Civil War broke out. [http://library.uncw.edu/web/collections/manuscript/MS039.html MS039 ] ] [http://members.aol.com/jweaver303/nc/macrae.htm Brigadier General William MacRae ] ]Civil War
MacRae enlisted as a private in the Monroe light infantry, and was elected captain when it became Company B, Fifteenth North Carolina infantry regiment. In April 1862, he was promoted to lieutenant colonel. During the Peninsula Campaign and at Second Manassas his regiment was a part of
Howell Cobb 's brigade. At the Battle of Antietam, MacRae commanded the brigade which had been reduced to 250 men during the fighting over the previous few weeks. MacRae's brigade repulsed three Union assaults but fell back when he had only 50 effectives remaining and his supply of ammunition was exhausted. At the Fredericksburg he fought with his regiment at Marye's Heights. Immediately following the battle the 15th North Carolina was transferred to Brigadier GeneralJohn Rogers Cooke 's North Carolina brigade. Cooke had been badly wounded at Fredericksburg and would not retun to the brigade until April 1863. In February 1863, MacRae was promoted tocolonel . This brigade served in North Carolina and southeast Virginia until after theGettysburg Campaign . in February, 1863, colonel, and in 1864 was commissioned brigadier-general. After rejoining theArmy of Northern Virginia , MacRae was distinguished for valor at theBattle of Bristoe Station . After Brigadier GeneralWilliam Whedbee Kirkland was wounded at theBattle of Cold Harbor MacRae was temporarily promoted to the rank of brigadier general and was assigned to the command of Kirkland's brigade (this was also the former brigade of Brigadier GeneralJ. Johnston Pettigrew ). At the Ream's Station MacRae's, Lane's, and Cooke's brigades droveJohn Gibbon 's 2nd Division ofWinfield Scott Hancock 's II Corps from its entrenchments in their front and captured an artillery battery. After meritorious service at theBattle of Boydton Plank Road MacRae remained with the army through the Appomattox Campaign. [ [http://www.aphillcsa.com/macrae.html And Then A.P. Hill Came Up - Biography of William MacRae ] ]Post War life
MacRae returned to North Carolina financially ruined. He became general superintendent of the Wilmington & Manchester Railroad. He took the same position with the Macon & Brunswick Railroad, and finally the
Western & Atlantic Railroad .Death
MacRae contracted
pneumonia and died at Augusta, Georiga. He is buried in his hometown of Wilmington, NC at Oakdale Cemetery.External links
*findagrave|10050 Retrieved on
2008-06-27
* [http://library.uncw.edu/web/collections/manuscript/MS039.html UNC Wilmington MacRae papers]
* [http://www.aphillcsa.com/macrae.html Web biography]
* [http://members.aol.com/jweaver303/nc/macrae.htm Web biography]References
* * Hess, Earl J. "Lee's Tar Heels: The Pettigrew-Kirkland-MacRae Brigade." (Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press, 2002. ISBN 0807826871
* http://library.uncw.edu/web/collections/manuscript/MS039.html
* http://www.aphillcsa.com/macrae.htmlNotes
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