- Joseph R. West
Infobox Senator
name=Joseph Rodman West
nationality=English American
jr/sr=United States Senator
state=Louisiana
party=Republican
term=March 4 ,1871 –March 3 ,1877
preceded=John S. Harris
succeeded=William P. Kellogg
date of birth=birth date|1822|9|19|mf=y
place of birth=New Orleans ,Louisiana
dead=dead
date of death=death date and age|1898|10|31|1822|9|19|mf=y
place of death=Washington, D.C.
spouse= Jeanne J. WestJoseph Rodman West (
September 19 ,1822 –October 31 ,1898 ) was aUnited States Senator fromLouisiana and a general in theUnited States Army during and after theAmerican Civil War . He led the troops that killed famedApache chiefMangas Coloradas .Born in
New Orleans , he moved with his parents toPhiladelphia in 1824 and was educated in private schools. He attended theUniversity of Pennsylvania from 1836 to 1837 and moved to New Orleans in 1841; he was a captain attached to Maryland and District of Columbia Volunteers in theMexican-American War , 1847-1848. He moved to California in 1849 where he engaged in newspaper work inSan Francisco , and was proprietor of the "San Francisco Price Current".During the Civil War he entered the
Union Army as lieutenant of the First Regiment, California Volunteer Infantry, in 1861; he was promoted to the rank of colonel and brigadier general. He spent much of his service in theNew Mexico Territory as well asArizona Territory .In January 1863, Mangas Coloradas decided to personally meet with U.S. military leaders at Fort McLane, near present-day Hurley in southwestern New Mexico. Mangas arrived under a white flag of truce to meet with Brigadier General West. Armed soldiers took him into custody and West is reported to have given an execution order to the sentries. That night Mangas was tortured, shot and killed as he was "trying to escape."
Following the Civil War, West was brevetted major general in 1866. He returned to New Orleans and was deputy
United States marshal andauditor forcustoms from 1867 to 1871.West was elected as a Republican to the U.S. Senate and served from
March 4 ,1871 , toMarch 3 ,1877 ; he was not a candidate for reelection. While in the Senate he was chairman of the Committee on Railroads (Forty-fourth Congress), and was a member of the Board of Commissioners of theDistrict of Columbia from 1882 to 1885. He retired from public life in 1885 and died in Washington, D.C. in 1898; interment was inArlington National Cemetery .References
*CongBio|W000303 Retrieved on
2008-02-10
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