- William Terry (congressman)
Infobox Congressman
name=William Terry
width=200px
state=Virginia
district=8th & 9th
party=Democrat
term=March 4 ,1871 –March 3 ,1873 March 4 ,1875 –March 3 ,1877
preceded=James K. Gibson Rees Bowen
succeeded=Eppa Hunton Auburn Pridemore
date of birth=birth date|1824|8|14|mf=y
place of birth=Amherst County, Virginia
date of death=death date|1888|9|5|mf=y
place of death=Wytheville, Virginia
spouse=Emma Wigginton
religion=
profession=Politician ,Lawyer ,Teacher , Soldier
footnotes=William Terry (
August 14 ,1824 –September 5 ,1888 ) was a nineteenth century politician, lawyer, teacher, and soldier fromVirginia and the last commander of the famedStonewall Brigade during theAmerican Civil War .Early life and career
Born in
Amherst County, Virginia , Terry attended an old field school as a child and went on to graduate from theUniversity of Virginia in 1848. He taught school, studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1851, commencing private practice inWytheville, Virginia . He engaged in newspaper work for eighteen months as the editor and co-owner of the "Wytheville Telegraph". [Summers, p. 760.]In 1852, he married Emma Wigginton of Bedford County. They raised four sons and three daughters. Terry joined the local
militia , serving aslieutenant of the "Wythe Grays." He led his company to Harpers Ferry during the John Brown affair in 1859. [Evans, p. 673.]Civil War
Following Virginia's
secession from the Union, Terry enrolled in the Confederate Army as a first lieutenant in the 4th Regiment, Virginia Infantry. In April 1861, he returned to Harpers Ferry, this time as a Confederate officer serving underStonewall Jackson . He saw his first significant combat in theFirst Battle of Bull Run . Terry was promoted to major in the spring of 1862 and fought in thePeninsula Campaign at the battles of Gaines' Mill and Malvern Hill. He was wounded in theSecond Battle of Bull Run and was cited for gallantry in the official report of his superior,William Taliaferro . He returned to the ranks to lead the 4th Virginia at theBattle of Fredericksburg . His regiment lost 140 of its 335 men in fierce fighting at Chancellorsville, but Terry escaped injury there, as well as in fighting atCulp's Hill at Gettysburg. [Evans, p. 674.]In February 1864, he was promoted to colonel, to date from September 1863. He was commissioned as a brigadier general on
May 20 ,1864 , following theWilderness Campaign . The following day, he was assigned command of abrigade formed from the survivors of the Stonewall Brigade and the badly depleted brigades ofJohn M. Jones andGeorge H. Steuart . Terry led the consolidated unit in the fighting at Cold Harbor and the defense of Petersburg.He commanded his brigade during
Jubal A. Early 's 1864 campaign in the Shenandoah Valley. Terry's hard-hitting final assault at theBattle of Monocacy finally broke the Union line and forced the withdrawal ofLew Wallace 's army. [ [http://www.armyhistory.org/armyhistorical.aspx?pgID=868&id=95&exCompID=32 Army History Research] ] Later that year, Terry was one of seven Confederate generals who were killed or wounded at theThird Battle of Winchester . Recovering, he led the brigade back to Petersburg, where he was again wounded onMarch 25 ,1865 , when Gordon'sCorps attacked Fort Stedman. Terry was taken to his home in Wytheville to recover from his injuries. As a result, Terry missed the surrender of theArmy of Northern Virginia atAppomattox Court House in April. When news arrived, he mounted his horse and started southward to join the army ofJoseph E. Johnston in North Carolina. However, he returned home when news arrived of Johnston's surrender atBennett Place .Postbellum years
After the war, though partially disabled from his three Civil War wounds, Terry resumed practicing law in Wytheville. He was easily elected as a Democrat to the
United States House of Representatives in 1870, serving from 1871 to 1873, but was unsuccessful in his campaign for reelection in 1872. Terry was re-elected to Congress in 1874 and served again from 1875 to 1877, being unsuccessful for reelection again in 1876. He was a delegate to theDemocratic National Convention in 1880 and afterwards resumed practicing law. [Congressional biography.]Terry drowned on
September 5 ,1888 , while attempting to ford Reed Creek near Wytheville after returning from the Grayson County Courthouse. He was interred in the town's East End Cemetery. [Summers, p. 760.]The William Terry Camp of the
United Confederate Veterans was named in honor of General Terry.References
*CongBio|T000136
*Evans, Clement A., "Confederate Military History". Volume III. Atlanta, Georgia: Confederate Publishing Company, 1899.
* Summers, Lewis Preston, "History of Southwest Virginia and Washington County". Genealogical Publishing Company, 1971, ISBN 0806379820.Notes
External links
*findagrave|11090 Retrieved on
2008-02-13 Persondata
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