- William R. Boggs
William Robertson Boggs (March 18, 1829 – September 11, 1911) was a general in the
Confederate States Army during theAmerican Civil War . He was noted as acivil engineer who constructed the military fortifications that protected some of the Confederacy's most important seaports.Early life and career
Boggs was born in
Augusta, Georgia . Comparatively little is known of his early youth, but it is known he studied at the Augusta Academy. [Boggs, p. ix.] Two of his brothers would also serve in the Confederate Army. They spent their summers at the Sand Hills near what is nowSummerville, South Carolina , a popular tourist resort. At the age of twenty in July 1849, he entered theUnited States Military Academy at West Point as a cadet from Georgia. He graduated four years later among the first five in his class. Among Boggs' classmates wereJames B. McPherson ,Philip H. Sheridan , andJohn M. Schofield , later Union generals, andJohn B. Hood of the Confederate service.On graduation he was brevetted as a
second lieutenant and assigned to the Topographical Bureau. He spent some time in the office of the Pacific Railroad Surveys. In 1854 he was transferred to the Ordnance Corps and was made assistant at theWatervliet Arsenal inTroy, New York . In December of the same year he became second lieutenant and in 1856 he was promoted to the rank offirst lieutenant . While at Watervliet Arsenal, on December 19, 1855, he married Mary Sophia, daughter of Col. John Symington, the commandant. To them were born five children–William R., Jr., a mining engineer who was murdered in Mexico in 1907; Elizabeth McCaw, John Symington, Edith Allston,and Henry Patterson Boggs. [Boggs, pp. xxii-xxiii.]In 1857 Boggs was transferred to the Louisiana Arsenal at
Baton Rouge, Louisiana . In 1859 he became inspector of ordnance at Point Isobel, Texas. On December 14, 1859, he took part in an engagement with Cortino's Mexican marauders nearFort Brown , for which he was given honorable mention by GeneralWinfield Scott . Soon after, he was transferred to the Alleghany Arsenal atPittsburgh, Pennsylvania , to which his father-in-law Colonel Symington had also been assigned. [Boggs, p. xi.]Civil War service
Boggs resigned from the U.S. Army the very day that the Georgia Convention adopted its
ordinance of secession . [Boggs, p. xii.] However, his father-in-law stayed in the Federal service. Early in the war, Boggs was appointed by GovernorJoseph E. Brown as the purchasing agent to procure arms, ammunition, and supplies for Georgia's state troops. Later, in the Provisional Confederate Army, Boggs' duties were again as an engineer and ordnance officer, given primarily to staff duty for such officers asBraxton Bragg . He was never given the command of troops in combat, although he commanded all engineers and artillery inPensacola, Florida . His major accomplishments were to pefect and complete fortifications and supply depots in 1861 (including the defenses ofCharleston, South Carolina , and Pensacola); to engineerKirby Smith 's invasion of Kentucky in 1862; and to assist Smith's military administration west of theMississippi River from 1863 to 1865. [Boggs, pp. xii-xiii.]In 1862, he was appointed Colonel, Chief Engineer of the State of Georgia. In recognition of his efforts in constructing the fortifications that defended
Savannah, Georgia , one of the earthworks was named Fort Boggs. During the Kentucky campaign, Colonel Boggs, by then back in the Confederate national service, won the confidence of his superiors. On General Kirby Smith's recommendation, he was promoted to the rank of brigadier general and became Chief of Staff under him in theTrans-Mississippi Department in the spring of 1863. [Boggs, p. xix.] Late in the war, Boggs resigned after a quarrel with Smith. For a short time thereafter, he commanded the District of Louisiana, but was soon superseded by Brig. Gen.Harry T. Hays and he subsequently awaited orders atShreveport, Louisiana .Early in 1865 he enlisted in an expedition to enter military service in
Mexico . Finding that the purpose of its leaders was to fight for Maximilian, rather than Juarez, he withdrew his name and returned to the Confederate army. With the collapse of the Confederate armies in the East, Kirby Smith moved his headquarters toHouston, Texas . The surrender of his army was made by Smith's subordinates, in which General Boggs participated, the parole of Boggs being dated June 9, 1865. [Boggs, p. xxi.]Postbellum career
After the war, Boggs engaged in the profession of engineering, participating to a great extent in railroad construction in the West. In 1875 he was appointed Professor of Mechanics in the
Virginia Polytechnic Institute at Blacksburg, a position he held until a reorganization of the faculty in 1881. One of his colleagues wrote, "He was highly valued by his associates as a man of force and culture; was esteemed by the student body as an attractive and honest teacher; by the people of the community as an upright, genial, agreeable gentleman. Politics was alone responsible for his removal." [Boggs, p. xxii.]The later years of his life were spent in
Winston-Salem, North Carolina , where he died at the age of eighty-two. He was buried in Salem Cemetery. [ [http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=10837 Find A Grave] ]One of his grandsons, Major
Archibald Butt , perished in the sinking of the British cruise liner, RMS "Titanic". [Boggs, p. viii.]References
* Boggs, William R., "Military Reminiscences of Gen. Wm. R. Boggs, C.S.A." Durham, North Carolina: The Seeman Printery, 1913.
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