- John T. Wilder
John Thomas Wilder (January 31, 1830 – October 20, 1917) was an officer in the
Union Army during theAmerican Civil War . As an industrialist, he was instrumental in developing the natural resources of the State of Tennessee.Early life and career
Wilder was born in the
Catskill Mountains in Hunter,Greene County, New York , a descendant of a long line of soldiers. His grandfather and great-grandfather both fought in theRevolutionary War , his great-grandfather losing a leg in theBattle of Bunker Hill . His father fought in theWar of 1812 .Wilder spent his younger years in Hunter, where he attended school. When he turned nineteen, his school days over, he decided to head west to make it on his own. Wilder soon arrived in
Columbus, Ohio , nearly penniless, and found employment as draftsman and then an apprentice millwright at a localfoundry .This training would lay the groundwork for his career.In 1857, eight years after he arrived in Columbus, he relocated to
Indiana , first to Lawrenceburg and then to Greensburg, where he established a small foundry of his own. It rapidly became a success. Wilder invented manyhydraulic machines that he patented, and he sold equipment, building mills and hydraulic works in many of the surrounding states. He also became nationally renowned as an expert in the field of hydraulics, patenting a uniquewater wheel in 1859.Civil War
With the outbreak of the Civil War, Wilder enrolled in the 1st Indiana Battery in April 1861, and was elected a captain. Governor
Oliver P. Morton appointed him as the lieutenant colonel of the17th Indiana Infantry Regiment three months later. On March 2, 1862, Wilder became the regiment's colonel. Serving in Maj. Gen.Don Carlos Buell 'sArmy of the Ohio , he saw his first combat at theBattle of Shiloh . In recognition for his performance and potential, he was assigned command of abrigade of infantry andIn the 1862 Confederate offensive into
Kentucky , Gen.Braxton Bragg 's army leftChattanooga, Tennessee , in late August. Bragg approached Munfordville, a station on theLouisville & Nashville Railroad where Wilder commanded the Union garrison, which consisted of three regiments with extensive fortifications. Wilder refused Brig. Gen.James R. Chalmers 's demand to surrender on September 14 and his men repulsed Chalmers's attacks that day, forcing the Confederates to conductsiege operations September 15–16. By this time, Wilder's 4,000 men were almost completely surrounded by 22,000 Confederates with 100 artillery pieces. Realizing that Union reinforcements were nearby and not wanting to kill or injure innocent civilians, the Confederates communicated still another demand for surrender. Wilder personally entered enemy lines blindfolded under a flag of truce, and Maj. Gen. Simon B. Buckner escorted him to view all the Confederate troops and to convince him of the futility of resisting. Impressed, Wilder surrendered his garrison. The formal ceremony occurred on September 17. Wilder spent two months as aprisoner of war before being exchanged. [Cozzens, pp. 14-15.]Wilder received wide attention for his performance in the
Tullahoma Campaign . He mounted his brigade on horses and mules that his men appropriated from the local area and moved into the battle with such rapidity that his men soon became known as the "Lightning Brigade". (They were also known as the "Hatchet Brigade" because Wilder issued them long handled hatchets to carry instead of cavalry sabers.) His men also carriedSpencer repeating rifle s, which were capable of a rate of firepower far greater than their Confederate adversaries. Bypassing Army red tape, Wilder had asked his men to vote on purchasing the rifles and they agreed unanimously. He obtain a loan from his hometown bank and each man of the brigade co-signed a personal loan of $35 for his rifle. [Cozzens, p. 15.] The Lightning Brigade seized and held Hoover's Gap, defeating repeated attempts to dislodge his force. Wilder was the principal commander of a diversion launched againstChattanooga, Tennessee —artillery bombardments known as theSecond Battle of Chattanooga —and Maj. Gen.George H. Thomas formally commended Colonel Wilder for his performance at theBattle of Chickamauga . He led the brigade during much of theAtlanta Campaign . He was promoted to brevet brigadier general of volunteers on August 7, 1864. Due to illness, Wilder resigned from the army in October 1864 and returned home.Postbellum career
After the war, Wilder settled in Chattanooga. In 1867, he founded an ironworks in the Chattanooga region, then built and operated the first two
blast furnace s in the South atRockwood, Tennessee . In 1870, he established a company in Chattanooga to manufacture rails for the railroads. From 1884 to 1892, he helped promote and construct theCharleston, Cincinnati & Chicago Railroad while living inJohnson City, Tennessee . While in Johnson City, he developed the booming industrial suburb of Carnegie, named in honor of fellow industrialist,Andrew Carnegie , and a host of iron making and railroad-related manufacturing facilities. Iron ore was brought to Johnson City via theEast Tennessee and Western North Carolina Railroad , and Wilder constructed a popular 166-room hotel near Johnson City named the Cloudland Hotel near the summit of Roan Mountain to serve tourists via this scenicnarrow gauge railway line.Wilder entered politics and was elected
mayor of Chattanooga in 1871. He resigned a year later to pursue his business interests. He unsuccessfully ran for theUnited States Congress in 1876. In 1877, he accepted the position of city postmaster, serving until 1882.He moved to
Knoxville, Tennessee in 1897 after receiving an appointment from PresidentWilliam McKinley as a Federal pension agent, then was commissioner of theChickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park .He died in
Jacksonville, Florida , aged 87, while on vacation and was buried in Forest Hills Cemetery in Chattanooga.References
* Cozzens, Peter, "This Terrible Sound: The Battle of Chickamauga", University of Illinois Press, 1992, ISBN 0-252-02236-X.
* U.S. War Department, [http://ehistory.osu.edu/osu/sources/records/list.cfm "The War of the Rebellion"] : "a Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies", U.S. Government Printing Office, 1880–1901.
* [http://tennesseeencyclopedia.net/imagegallery.php?EntryID=W059 Tennessee Encyclopedia]
* [http://civilwarindiana.com/biographies/wilder_john_thomas.html Civil War Indiana]
* [http://www.lib.utc.edu/wilder-letters.html John T. Wilder Letters]Notes
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