- Adna Chaffee
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For his son, who was also a general, see Adna R. Chaffee, Jr..
Adna Romanza Chaffee
General Adna R. ChaffeeBorn April 14, 1842
Orwell, OhioDied November 1, 1914 (aged 72)
Los Angeles, CaliforniaPlace of burial Arlington National Cemetery Allegiance United States of America
UnionService/branch Union Army Years of service 1861-1906 Rank Lieutenant General Commands held Chief of Staff of the United States Army Battles/wars - Peninsular Campaign
- Maryland Campaign
- Appomattox Campaign
Indian Wars
- Battle of Paint Creek
- Battle of Red River
- Battle of Big Dry Wash
Spanish-American War
Boxer Rebellion
*Battle of Peking
Philippine-American WarOther work Public Servant Adna Romanza Chaffee (April 14, 1842 – November 1, 1914) was a General in the United States Army. Chaffee took part in the American Civil War and Indian Wars, played a key role in the Spanish-American War, and was instrumental in crushing the Boxer Rebellion in China. He was the Army Chief of Staff from 1904 to 1906, overseeing far-reaching transformation of organization and doctrine in the Army.
Contents
Civil War
Chaffee was born in Orwell, Ohio. When the American Civil War broke out in July 1861, Chaffee enlisted in the Union Army as a Private in the U.S. 6th Cavalry Regiment. In 1862, Chaffee was promoted to sergeant and took part in the Peninsular Campaign and the Battle of Antietam. In September of that year he was made the First Sergeant of Company K. He was commissioned as a Second Lieutenant in May 1863. His 6th Cavalry on detached service from General John Buford's 1st Union Cavalry Division, though outnumbered attacked a Confederate Cavalry regiment at Fairfield, Maryland, just outside of Gettysburg on July 3, 1863. (source, Wittenberg, Eric: Gettysburg: Forgotten Cavalry Actions)In the ensuing action he was wounded and briefly held a prisoner of the Condederates. He served with the 6th Cavalry for the remainder of the war, being twice wounded. In February 1865, he was promoted to First Lieutenant. For his "gallant and meritorious" actions in the Battle of Dinwiddie Court House he was brevetted Captain.
Indian Wars
Chaffee decided to remain with the Army after the war. He was posted to the western frontier, and was promoted to Captain of Regulars in October 1867. For the next thirty years he served in the Indian Wars, fighting the Central Plains and Southwestern tribes. In 1868, he was brevetted major for his actions at Paint Creek, Texas. In the following years he engaged the Indians many times, most notably at Red River, Texas in 1874, and Big Dry Wash, Arizona in 1882, for which he was brevetted Lieutenant Colonel. In July 1888 he was promoted to Major and transferred to the 9th Cavalry. From 1894 to 1896, he was an instructor of tactics at the Army’s Infantry and Cavalry School at Fort Leavenworth. In June 1897 he was promoted to Colonel and transferred to the 3rd Cavalry, where he served as commandant of the Cavalry School at Fort Riley until 1898.
Spanish-American War
With the outbreak of the Spanish-American War in 1898, he was assigned a brigade and was promoted to Brigadier General of volunteers in May of that year, and in July after the victory at El Caney, to Major General of volunteers. From late 1898 to May 1900, he served as the chief of staff to the military governor of Cuba, General Leonard Wood, being promoted to Colonel of regulars in May 1899.
Boxer Rebellion
In June 1900, the Boxer Rebellion broke out in China. Chaffee was sent to China in July as the commander of the U.S. Army’s China Relief Expedition. The Expedition was a part of the international force sent to rescue Western citizens and put down the rebellion. Chaffee played a key role in the rapid advance to the imperial capital of Beijing and its subsequent capture on August 14, 1900, which relieved the beleaguered embassy staffs and other Western nationals.
Later Military Service
In February 1901, he became a Major General in the regular army. From July of that year until October 1902, he served as the military governor of the Philippines. This included the beginning of the second phase of the Philippine Insurrection. In October 1902, he became commander of the Department of the East, a position he held until October 1903.
In January 1904, he was promoted to Lieutenant General and, from January 9, 1904 until January 14, 1906, served as the Chief of Staff of the United States Army. At his own request, he was retired on February 1, 1906.
In his retirement, he moved to Los Angeles, where he was appointed President of the Board of Public Works for the city of Los Angeles.
Family
Chaffee was married twice: in 1868, he married Kate Haynie Reynolds, who died the following year; in 1875, he married his second wife, Annie Frances Rockwell. His son Adna Chaffee, Jr. also became a general and was one of the fathers of U.S. Army’s armored forces.
Tributes
A historical marker[1] documenting Chaffee's birthplace stands in Orwell, Ohio. As well, the city of Chaffee, Missouri was named in his honor when founded in 1905.
See also
- Major General Adna R. Chaffee, Jr.; his son
References
- ^ The Ohio Channel : Your State : Remarkable Ohio : Home at www.remarkableohio.org
External links
- Men of Mark in America Biography & Portrait
- "Adna Chaffee". Find a Grave. http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=9147. Retrieved August 5, 2010.
Military offices Preceded by
Samuel B.M. YoungChief of Staff of the United States Army
1904–1906Succeeded by
John C. BatesLeaders of the United States ArmySenior Officer /
Commanding General
Chiefs of Staff Young · Chaffee · Bates · Bell · Wood · Wotherspoon · Scott · Bliss · March · Pershing · Hines · Summerall · MacArthur · Craig · Marshall · Eisenhower · Bradley · Collins · Ridgway · Taylor · Lemnitzer · Decker · Wheeler · Johnson · Westmoreland · Palmer · Abrams · Weyand · Rogers · Meyer · Wickham · Vuono · Sullivan · Reimer · Shinseki · Schoomaker · Casey · Dempsey · OdiernoVice Chiefs of Staff Predecessors Original units Medal of Honor recipients
(1866–1918)Edward L. Baker, Jr. · Dennis Bell · Thomas Boyne · Benjamin Brown · George Ritter Burnett · Louis H. Carpenter · John Denny · Clinton Greaves · Henry Johnson · George Jordan · Fitz Lee · Isaiah Mays · William McBryar · Thomas Shaw · Emanuel Stance · Freddie Stowers · William H. Thompkins · Augustus Walley · George H. Wanton · Moses Williams · William Othello Wilson · Brent WoodsNotable battles
(1866–1918)American Indian Wars Saline River · Texas–Indian wars · Beecher Island · Wichita I · Beaver Creek · North Fork · Red River War · Wichita II · Apache Wars · Victorio Campaign · Fort Tularosa · Bannock Uprising · Yaqui Uprising · Bear ValleySpanish–American War Philippine–American War Border War World War I See Also American Governors-General of the Philippines Smallcaps indicate military governors · Italics indicate acting governorsCategories:- 1842 births
- 1914 deaths
- People from Ashtabula County, Ohio
- Union Army officers
- Cavalry commander
- American military personnel of the Spanish–American War
- American military personnel of the Philippine–American War
- United States Army Chiefs of Staff
- American military personnel of the Boxer Rebellion
- People of the wars between the United States and Native Americans
- People of Ohio in the American Civil War
- Burials at Arlington National Cemetery
- United States Army generals
- Peninsular Campaign
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