- George W. Morgan
George Washington Morgan (
September 20 ,1820 –July 26 ,1893 ) was an Americansoldier ,lawyer , andpolitician . He fought in theTexas Revolution and theMexican-American War , and was a general in theUnion Army during theAmerican Civil War . Morgan later served as a three-termpostbellum United States Congressman fromOhio .Early life and career
Morgan was born in
Washington County, Pennsylvania , to a prominent family. His grandfather, Col. George Morgan, was the first to give PresidentThomas Jefferson the information regardingAaron Burr 's conspiracy. G. W. Morgan was educated in local schools, and then in 1836, he withdrew fromWashington College at the age of 16 and enlisted in a military company that was commanded by his older brother, Thomas Jefferson Morgan. They traveled south toMexican Texas to fight in the struggle for independence fromMexico . Morgan received a commission in the regular Texas Army underSam Houston as alieutenant , and rose tocaptain commanding the post at Galveston. He served with Captain Robertson's rangers and Company B of the First Regiment of Texas Rangers. He resigned in 1839 to return to Pennsylvania. [ [http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/MM/fmo49_print.html Handbook of Texas Online] ]In 1841, he entered the
United States Military Academy , but left in 1843 due to poor grades. He moved toMount Vernon, Ohio , studied law, passed the bar exam, and established a law practice there in 1845. He served asprosecutor for Knox County.When war erupted with Mexico, Morgan was appointed
Colonel of the 2nd Ohio Volunteer Infantry. He subsequently was commissioned as Colonel of the15th U.S. Infantry in March 1847, serving under GeneralWinfield Scott . To put an end to theguerilla warfare and murder of American soldiers, Colonel Morgan seized a number of prominent Mexican citizens and issued a proclamation announcing that for every American soldier killed by the guerillas, a citizen would be executed. The murders ceased at once. ["Newark Daily Advocate",August 18 ,1900 ,Newark, Ohio ] He was breveted to brigadier general in 1848 for his gallantry at the battles of Contreras and Churubusco, where he was severely wounded. Returning to Ohio to recuperate, he received the formal thanks of the Ohio legislature.Morgan resumed his law practice in Mount Vernon. He married Sarah H. Hall of
Zanesville, Ohio , onOctober 7 ,1851 , and they had two children. [ [http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/MM/fmo49_print.html Handbook of Texas Online] ]He was a lawyer until 1856, when he was appointed by President
James Buchanan as the United States Consul toMarseilles . Two years later, he became the Minister toPortugal , which post he held until 1861, when he returned to the United States following the outbreak of the Civil War.Civil War
Morgan, due to his previous military experience in two wars, was appointed as a brigadier general in the
Union Army onNovember 21 ,1861 , reporting to Maj. Gen.Don Carlos Buell in the Western Theater. In March 1862, Morgan assumed command of the 7th Division of theArmy of the Ohio and was ordered to southeasternKentucky to drive the Confederates from the strategicCumberland Gap and occupy it. Moving quickly, Morgan defeatedCarter L. Stevenson 's Confederates and chased off the defenders onJune 18 ,1862 . He then successfully manned the gap with his four brigades of infantry, augmented by artillery placed on the heights.However, in September, he was forced to hastily retreat towards the
Ohio River asBraxton Bragg invaded Kentucky, cutting off his supply routes. Morgan conducted a masterful retreat in the face of the much superior enemy force, despite being harassed by constant attacks from Col.John H. Morgan 's guerillas. George Morgan's 8,000 men marched over 200 miles from Cumberland Gap in sixteen days toGreenup, Kentucky , arriving there onOctober 3 on their way toCamp Dennison in Ohio. [ [http://kentucky.gov/kyhs/hmdb/MarkerSearch.aspx?mode=Subject&subject=156 Kentucky Historical Society] ]In November, Morgan served with Maj. Gen.
Jacob D. Cox in western Virginia (nowWest Virginia ) in the Kanawha River Valley, defending Charleston.The following year, Morgan commanded the 3rd Division of the XIII Corps under Maj. Gen.
William T. Sherman during theVicksburg Campaign . Sherman, however, was upset with Morgan's performance at thebattle of Chickasaw Bluffs , when he failed to carry out orders for a planned attack. [ [http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/MM/fmo49_print.html Handbook of Texas Online] ] Morgan soon redeemed himself as he subsequently led the XIII Corps force that captured Fort Hindman inArkansas . His health having deteriorated from the lengthy campaigning, and dissatisfied with the use of black troops, Morgan resigned his commission onJune 8 ,1863 , and returned to Ohio and civilian life.Later life and political career
While strongly in favor of maintaining the Union at any cost, Morgan was equally opposed to any governmental interference with the state institution of the South,
slavery , and believed that the Federal government had no legal right to abolish the practice. Morgan campaigned in Ohio for former army generalGeorge B. McClellan in the 1864 Presidential Election. In 1865 he was the unsuccessful Democratic candidate forGovernor of Ohio , being defeated by his former commander in the Kanawha Valley,Jacob D. Cox .Nonetheless, he continued to pursue a political career, and in 1866 was elected to the
Fortieth United States Congress from Ohio's 13th District, serving on theCommittee on Foreign Affairs . There, he voted against the impeachment of President Andrew Johnson. Two years later, he appeared to have won reelection. However, his seat was contested by the defeated Republican candidate,Columbus Delano , who supplanted him onJune 3 ,1868 . Not deterred, Morgan campaigned again in 1870 and was elected to another term, holding his Congressional seat until 1873, serving on the committees on foreign affairs, military affairs, and reconstruction. He was an outspoken critic of the administration's harsh policies on Reconstruction and constantly battled with the Radical Republicans. Morgan ran forSpeaker of the United States House of Representatives , but was defeated byJames G. Blaine .Following his retirement from Congress, Morgan was a delegate-at-large to the 1876
Democratic National Convention in St. Louis. [Appletons Cyclopedia]He died at
Fort Monroe ,Virginia , and was buried in Mound View Cemetery in Mount Vernon, Ohio.ee also
*List of American Civil War generals
References
:Appletons
* [http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/MM/fmo49_print.html Handbook of Texas Online]
* [http://kentucky.gov/kyhs/hmdb/MarkerSearch.aspx?mode=Subject&subject=156 Kentucky Historical Society - roadside markers for Morgan's Retreat]
*Newark, Ohio, "Daily Advocate", August 18, 1900.Notes
External links
CongBio|M000950 Retrieved on
2008-08-13
* [http://americanhistory.si.edu/militaryhistory/collection/object.asp?ID=523 Smithsonian Institution collection - photo of Morgan's Mexican-American War flintlock pistol]
*findagrave|5893676 Retrieved on2008-08-13 Further reading
* Asbury, Samuel E., ed., "Extracts from the Reminiscences of General George W. Morgan," "Southwestern Historical Quarterly" 30 (January 1927).
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