- William Gamble (military)
William Gamble (
January 1 ,1818 –December 20 ,1866 ) was a civil engineer and a Unioncavalry officer in theAmerican Civil War .Early life
Gamble was born in the
townland of Duross,Lisnarick ,County Fermanagh ,Ireland . He studiedcivil engineering , worked in the Queen's Surveying Office, and participated in theNorthern Ireland survey. He emigrated to the United States in 1838. Since he had experience as adragoon in theBritish army , he enlisted as a private in the 1st U.S. Dragoons and rose through the ranks to becomeSergeant Major by 1839. While in the Army he married Sophia Steingrandt onMay 6 ,1841 , and they had 13 (by some accounts 15) children together. After fighting in theSeminole Wars , he was discharged in 1843 and worked as a civil engineer for the Board of Public Works inChicago and lived inEvanston, Illinois . His house is now used by theAnthropology Department ofNorthwestern University .Civil War
After the start of the Civil War, Gamble was appointed
Lieutenant Colonel of the 8th Illinois Cavalry regiment onSeptember 18 ,1861 . His nomination was urged by his close friend,U.S. Congressman John F. Farnsworth , who raised and commanded the regiment. Gamble's son George also joined the regiment as afirst lieutenant . (George survived the war, but was killed in a collapsed hotel during the1906 San Francisco Earthquake ).Gamble's regiment was attached to the Pennsylvania Reserve Division and fought in the
Peninsula Campaign , where he was wounded in the chest, leading a cavalry charge against rebel pickets more than a month after the end of theSeven Days Battles . After recovering from his wound, Gamble was promoted tocolonel onDecember 5 ,1862 , just before theBattle of Fredericksburg , but his regiment saw no action in that fight. When Farnsworth was promoted, Gamble was given command of the 8th Illinois Cavalry. In the spring of 1863, he was promoted to command of the 1st Brigade ofAlfred Pleasonton 's cavalry division in theArmy of the Potomac , but he was away from the Army on medical leave during theBattle of Chancellorsville . (Possibly as a result of his wound the year before or the severity of the winter, Gamble was suffering fromrheumatism andneuralgia .)During the
Gettysburg Campaign , Gamble continued on leave and missed the largest cavalry battle of the war, Brandy Station. The officer in temporary command of his brigade, ColonelBenjamin Franklin Davis , was killed there, and Gamble returned to the field onJune 13 ,1863 . His brigade was assigned toJohn Buford 's 1st Division. He reached Gettysburg onJune 30 and was riding at the head of the column when they spotted the first elements of the ConfederateArmy of Northern Virginia and began theBattle of Gettysburg on the morning ofJuly 1 .While his troops were hopelessly outnumbered, they slowed the progress of the
Mississippi brigades from GeneralA.P. Hill 's corps for about two hours while Union infantry from Maj. Gen.John F. Reynolds 's I Corps (James S. Wadsworth 's division) hurried to join the fight. When it came time to retire, Colonel Gamble's troops moved to the infantry's left flank. Gamble, along with the rest of Buford's cavalry, had provided a crucial window of time to get the Union Army into position.Later in 1863, Gamble commanded a cavalry division in the XXII Corps of the Department of Washington for the remainder of the war. He was involved in the defenses of
Washington, D.C. , and his troopers also tangled with the Confederate partisan ranger,John S. Mosby . He commanded the remount station at Camp Stoneman, but the lingering effects of his wounds prevented any further field service. Gamble received a brevet promotion tobrigadier general onDecember 12 ,1864 , and a full promotion tobrigadier general onSeptember 25 ,1865 . He was mustered out of the volunteer service onMarch 13 ,1866 , and reentered the service with the rank ofmajor in the 8th U.S. Cavalry.Postbellum
Gamble died of
cholera in Virgin Bay,Nicaragua , while en route to command of thePresidio of San Francisco , and is buried in Virgin Bay in the Virgin Grove Cemetery, a burial ground which has been flooded and obliterated by the waters of the Bay.In popular media
Gamble was portrayed by
Buck Taylor in the 1993 film "Gettysburg", based on Michael Shaara's novel, "The Killer Angels ".References
* Eicher, John H., and Eicher, David J., "Civil War High Commands", Stanford University Press, 2001, ISBN 0-8047-3641-3.
* Petruzzi, J. David, [http://www.bufordsboys.com "General John Buford's Cavalry in the Gettysburg Campaign"]
* Petruzzi, J. David, "John Buford: By the Book," "America's Civil War" Magazine, July 2005.
* Warner, Ezra J., "Generals in Blue: Lives of the Union Commanders", Louisiana State University Press, 1964, ISBN 0-8071-0822-7.
* [http://www.gdg.org/Research/OOB/Union/July1-3/wgamble.html Gettysburg Discussion Group online biography]
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