- John George Walker
Infobox Military Person
name= John George Walker
lived=July 22 ,1821 –July 20 ,1893
caption=
nickname=
placeofbirth=Jefferson City, Missouri
placeofdeath=Washington, D.C.
allegiance= United States of America,Confederate States of America
branch=
serviceyears= 1846–61 (U.S.A), 1861–65 (C.S.A)
rank=Major General
unit=
commands=
battles=Mexican-American War -Battle of Molino del Rey American Civil War -Peninsula Campaign -Battle of Malvern Hill -Battle of South Mountain -Battle of Antietam -Siege of Vicksburg -Battle of Milliken's Bend -Red River Campaign -Battle of Mansfield -Battle of Jenkins' Ferry
awards=
relations=
laterwork=John George Walker (
July 22 ,1821 –July 20 ,1893 [Eicher, p. 549. Birth and death dates are taken from Walker's tombstone. Alternative dates for birth and death areJuly 22 ,1822 , andJuly 21 ,1893 .] ) was a Confederate general in theAmerican Civil War .Early life and military career
Walker was born in
Jefferson City, Missouri .Eicher, p. 549.] He grew up in theSaint Louis, Missouri , area and graduated from the predecessor toWashington University in 1844.Walker joined the
U.S. Army as afirst lieutenant of the U.S. Mounted Rifles in 1846, and served with distinction in theMexican-American War , where he breveted tocaptain for San Juan de los Llanos and was wounded at Molino del Rey. He remained in the Army until 1861, when he joined theConfederate States Army as amajor in thecavalry .Civil War
ervice in the East
Walker was promoted to
lieutenant colonel of the 8th Texas Cavalry in August 1861, where he served in the Department ofNorth Carolina . In September 1861, he was promoted tocolonel .In January 1862, he was promoted to
brigadier general and served in thePeninsula Campaign in the division of Brig. Gen.Theophilus H. Holmes , where he was wounded at Malvern Hill. His division occupiedLoudoun Heights , overlookingHarpers Ferry, West Virginia before its garrison surrendered toStonewall Jackson onSeptember 15 ,1862 . He served under Maj. Gen.James Longstreet at South Mountain and Antietam.Trans-Mississippi
In November 1862, Walker was promoted to
major general and transferred to theTrans-Mississippi Department , where he was given command of 12 Texas regiments, numbering 12,000 men, training at Camp Nelson inArkansas . Walker formed the regiments into a Division, which earned the nickname "Walker's Greyhounds " for their ability to move quickly over many miles on foot. From November 1862 until the end of the war, the Greyhounds were formed exclusively of soldiers from Texas, and did not leave theTrans-Mississippi Department .In March 1863, the new commander of the Trans-Mississippi Department, Lt. Gen.
Edmund Kirby Smith , assigned the Greyhounds to Maj. Gen. Richard Taylor's Western Louisiana command, and they were given the task of attacking Maj. Gen.Ulysses S. Grant 's supply line that ran on the western bank of theMississippi River on theLouisiana side opposite the besiegedVicksburg, Mississippi .Grant, having recently moved his supply lines to the eastern banks of the Mississippi, was not harmed by the attack of Walker's Greyhounds. Hawes's Brigade was engaged in combat against the Federals at the
Battle of Young's Point , and McCullough's Brigade fought African-American Union troops at theBattle of Milliken's Bend onJune 6 ,1863 . This was one of the first times African-American troops engaged in combat. The troops fought bravely, but poorly trained, suffered heavy casualties at the hand of Walker's men. The battle became a Union victory when Federal gunboats supported the Union troops, driving McCullough's Brigade back.Taylor, who commanded Walker in this campaign, had argued against the venture to his superior Smith. He argued that Walker's troops would be better used helping his Army of 4,000 attack New Orleans, whose defense had been severely weakened by the movement of Banks' Army of the Gulf upriver to Port Hudson.
After Milliken's Bend, Taylor again requested Walker's troops to aid in his attack on
New Orleans , but Smith again denied the request. Walker spent the balance of the summer fruitlessly patrolling the northeastern area of Louisiana, unable to cross the Mississippi and support the besieged Vicksburg.Walker headed back to Arkansas in late 1863, but in March 1864, joined Taylor once again in Alexandria to help Taylor defend against the advances of
Nathaniel P. Banks and hisArmy of the Gulf in theRed River Campaign . Walker's troops played a critical role in the Confederate victory at theBattle of Mansfield onApril 8 ,1864 . Rather than leave Walker's Greyhounds with Taylor as he sought to capture the retreating Banks, Smith sent Walker north to fight Union GeneralFrederick Steele . Walker engaged Steele at theBattle of Jenkins' Ferry onApril 30 ,1864 , about 30 miles south ofLittle Rock, Arkansas .As Steele fled northward after the battle, clearly not intending to join Banks in his attempt to capture
Shreveport, Louisiana , Walker reversed course and headed back south to join Taylor's pursuit of Banks. He arrived in Alexandria onMay 23 ,1864 , the same day that Banks's retreating Army was being picked up by Federal troop transports at Simmesport.District of Western Louisiana
When Taylor was given command of the Department of Alabama, Mississippi, and Eastern Louisiana in August 1864, Walker was given command of his former superior's District of Western Louisiana. By the end of the war, he had been transferred further west, and commanded the District of Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona.
Postbellum career
At the close of the Civil War, Walker fled to
Mexico , where he remained for several years. Returning to the United States, he later served as the United States Consul inBogotá ,Colombia , and as a Special Commissioner to thePan-American Convention .Walker died in Washington, D.C. He is buried in the
Stonewall Jackson Cemetery,Winchester, Virginia .References
* Eicher, John H., and Eicher, David J., "Civil War High Commands", Stanford University Press, 2001, ISBN 0-8047-3641-3.
* Lowe, Richard G.,"Walker's Texas Division, C.S.A: Greyhounds of the Trans-Mississippi", Louisiana State University Press, 2004, ISBN 0-8071-2933-X.Notes
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