- William Wallace Smith Bliss
William Wallace Smith Bliss (
August 17 ,1815 –August 5 ,1853 ) was aUnited States Army officer. He was born in Whitehall,New York . He was the son of Captain John Bliss (of Lebanon,New Hampshire ) and Olive Hall Simonds (ofTodd County, Kentucky ). John Bliss was a graduate of West Point in 1811.Military career
Bliss entered the United States Military Academy on
1 September ,1829 . He showed very great mathematical gifts while a student. He graduated1 July ,1833 (not yet 18 years old) as aSecond Lieutenant in the 4th Infantry Regiment. It was his choice to serve in the infantry.He served in the
Fort Mitchell army garrison inAlabama from 1833 to 1834. During 1845 he was involved in operations against theCherokee .From
2 October 1834 until4 January 1840 he served as AssistantProfessor ofMathematics at West Point. As aCaptain , he served as Chief of Staff to the Commanding General in the Florida War from 1840 until 1841. He served at Fort Smith,Arkansas and atFort Jesup ,Louisiana .In 1845 he took part in the military occupation of
Texas .Between April 1846 and November 1847 he took part in the Mexican War, including fighting in theBattle of Palo Alto on8 May 1846 . His conduct warranted promotion to major on9 May 1846 . He fought in theBattle of Buena Vista and was promoted toLieutenant-Colonel in February 1847 for gallant and meritorious service.During his service in Texas and in
Mexico he served underMajor-General Zachary Taylor . Bliss was noted for his efficiency. His writing was simple, elegant, vigorous, and picturesque. He was cheerful and popular with the public.Intellectual pursuits
He received an A.M. from
Dartmouth College ,New Hampshire in 1848.He was a member of theRoyal Society of Northern Antiquaries ofCopenhagen ,Denmark and an Honorary Member of the American Ethnological Society.He was gifted at languages, and was fluent in at least thirteen [ [http://www.library.ci.corpus-christi.tx.us/MexicanWar/blisswws.htm Wlliam W. S. Bliss ] ] .George Perkins Marsh , thephilologist , said that Bliss was the best linguist in America.Political life
On
December 5 ,1848 , atBaton Rouge ,Louisiana , he married the general's youngest daughter, Mary Elizabeth Taylor ("Miss Betty"). When General Taylor becamePresident of the United States , on4 March 1849 he became Private Secretary to the President. The President's wife took no part in formal social events and delegated this to her daughter. Bliss's wife was, in effect, theFirst Lady at theWhite House at the age of 22. The popular young couple seemed destined to become powerful figures in Washington.On
22 March 1849 theState of New York presented him with a Gold Medal for his bravery in Mexico, at Palo Alto, Resaca de la Palma, Monterrey and Buena Vista.Last years
The President died suddenly in July 1850. Bliss accompanied the widow to
Pascagoula, Mississippi , where she too died in 1852. Bliss then took up the post of Adjutant-General of the Western Division of the Army. Following a visit to plague-ridden New Orleans on behalf ofTulane University then named the "University of Louisiana", Colonel Bliss died ofYellow Fever at Pascagoula5 August 1853 , aged 38. Thus Miss Betty lost her father, mother, and husband in a little over three years.On
March 8 1854 , the Post of El Paso officially becameFort Bliss . Bliss had never visited El Paso. A twenty-foot memorial of Italian marble was raised to the memory of Colonel Bliss, "a finished scholar, an accomplished gentleman and a gallant soldier", in the Girod Street Cemetery, New Orleans. In 1955, the cemetery being condemned for the building of a highway, Colonel Bliss’ remains and monument were moved to Fort Bliss.References
*Carl Sferrazza. "America's First Families: An Inside View of 200 Years of Private Life in the White House", Lisa Drew Books
External links
* [http://members.aol.com/blissfhstestsite/eminent.htm#wwsb The Bliss Family History Society] ,
* [http://www.cem.va.gov/nchp/ftbliss.htm Fort Bliss National Cemetery] ,
* [http://austin.episd.org/ephistory/quadfortbliss1.htm Fort Bliss The Post Opposite El Paso] ,
* [http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~mysouthernfamily/myff/d0077/g0000043.html My Southern Family] ,
* [http://www.library.ci.corpus-christi.tx.us/MexicanWar/blisswws.htm Military biography of William Bliss] from the Cullum biographies
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.