- Roswell S. Ripley
Infobox Military Person
name= Roswell Sabine Ripley
born=March 14 ,1823
died=March 26 ,1887
caption=
nickname=
placeofbirth=Worthington, Ohio
placeofdeath=New York City
allegiance= United States of America,Confederate States of America
branch=
serviceyears= 1843–53 (USA), 1861–65 (CSA)
rank=Brigadier General
unit=
commands=
battles=U.S.-Mexican War -Battle of Monterey -Battle of Veracruz -Battle of Cerro Gordo -Battle of Contreras -Battle of Churubusco -Battle of Molino del Rey -Battle of Chapultepec -Battle of Mexico City Seminole Wars American Civil War -Battle of Fort Sumter -Battle of Mechanicsville -Battle of Gaines Mill -Battle of Malvern Hill -Battle of South Mountain -Battle of Antietam -Battle of Fredericksburg
awards=
relations=
laterwork=Roswell Sabine Ripley (
March 14 ,1823 –March 26 ,1887 ) was an officer in theUnited States Army during theMexican-American War and, despite being Northern-born, abrigadier general in theConfederate States Army during the Civil War. He was also an author and a prosperousSouth Carolina businessman.Early life and career
Ripley was born in
Worthington, Ohio , a small village in Franklin County not far from Columbus. His family relocated to the state ofNew York , where he received an appointment to theUnited States Military Academy . He graduated in 1843, ranking 7th out of 39 cadets. He was assigned as asecond lieutenant to garrison duty, as well as becoming anartillery instructor.Lieutenant Ripley served in the Mexican-American War on the staffs of Gen.
Zachary Taylor and Gen.Gideon Pillow , seeing action at the battles of Monterey, Vera Cruz, Cerro Gordo, Contreras, Churubusco, Molino del Rey, Chapultepec, and the capture of Mexico City. For gallantry in action, Ripley was brevetted captain for Cerro Gordo and major for Chapultepec. He published a "History of the Mexican War" (2 vols., New York, 1849).He was engaged in the Second Seminole War in
Florida in 1849, where again he saw combat. Following the war, he was on garrison duty in various posts in the South. He married a woman fromCharleston, South Carolina , in 1852. Ripley resigned from the army in 1853 and moved to Charleston to settle his wife's estates. He established a successful business, and, over time, Ripley became a supporter ofstates rights . He joined the South Carolina statemilitia and became a major of ordnance.Civil War
After South Carolina seceded from the Union, Ripley became a
lieutenant colonel in the Army of South Carolina. He and his men helped garrisonFort Moultrie . He helped direct the fire from a battery during the bombardment of Fort Sumter in Charleston Harbor onApril 13 ,1861 . OnAugust 15 ,1861 , he was appointed as a brigadier general in the Confederate Army and assigned command of the Department of South Carolina and its coastal defenses. From December 1861 until May 1862, he had charge of the Second Military District of South South Carolina.Transferred to field command in
Virginia , Ripley commanded aninfantry brigade (comprising two Georgia and twoNorth Carolina regiment s) in the defenses ofRichmond, Virginia , in June 1862. Assigned to theArmy of Northern Virginia , Ripley's Brigade participated in the battles of Mechanicsville, Gaines Mill, and Malvern Hill during thePeninsula Campaign .Despite being depleted from recent fighting and illness, Ripley's Brigade fought in the
Maryland Campaign at theBattle of South Mountain and the Battle of Sharpsburg in September 1862. He suffered a severe wound in the neck at Sharpsburg, but soon recovered and rejoined the army. In November, he was involved in the defense of Fredericksburg.Criticized for his performance at Antietam, General Ripley in early 1863 returned to South Carolina and took charge of the First Military District. His men constructed a series of improved defenses around Charleston, and Ripley commanded the troops that repelled a
Union Navy attack onApril 7 ,1863 . He continued in command of Charleston's fortifications until the city was evacuated in late 1864, and then Ripley traveled toRichmond, Virginia , where he rejoinedRobert E. Lee 's Army of Northern Virginia. Ripley surrendered with Lee atAppomattox Court House in April 1865.Postbellum
After the war, Ripley, whose wife and daughter had left him, went abroad and resided in
England for over twenty years. In the late 1880s, he returned to the United States and settled inNew York City , where he died of a massivestroke . He was buried in Magnolia Cemetery in Charleston.His uncle,
James Wolfe Ripley , had led the Federal troops in Charleston Harbor during theNullification Crisis , and was the Chief of Ordnance of the U.S. Army during the first half of the Civil War.A monument in Worthington, Ohio, was erected in 1894 in honor of General Ripley. It is one of the few monuments to Confederate generals in the North.
References
*Appletons
* [http://www.scvohio.org/RipleyTalk.htm Biography by Chet Bennett]External links
*findagrave|9256 Retrieved on
2008-02-13
* [http://www.multied.com/bio/CWcGENS/CSARipley.html On-line biography]
* [http://www.worthingtonmemory.org/WorthingtonMemoryExpandedRecord.cfm?ID=1148&tn=1 Monument to Ripley in Worthington, Ohio]
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