- John Cook (US Army officer)
John Cook (
June 12 ,1825 –October 13 ,1910 ) was anIllinois politician and a general in theUnion Army during theAmerican Civil War . He served in the Western Theater and played a prominent role in securing the Union victory at theBattle of Fort Donelson , helping to force the surrender of the defenders.Biography
Cook was born in
Belleville, Illinois , to a well connected political family. His maternal grandfather,Ninian Edwards , was aU.S. Senator and theGovernor of Illinois . His father was Daniel Cook, who was a member of theU.S. House of Representatives at the time. Following Daniel's untimely death at the age of 33, his widow Julia Catherine Cook moved with their only child, John, back to Belleville, where she died three years later, leaving Cook as an orphan.Cook received a good education and entered the law practice. He was elected mayor of
Springfield, Illinois , in 1855. Cook was the captain and commander of a military company called the Springfield Greys.During the early days of Civil War, Cook's
militia company enlisted in Federal service in April 1861. They formed the nucelus of Company I of the7th Illinois Volunteer Regiment , of which Cook was appointed colonel. At the Battle of Fort Donelson, he commanded the 2nd Brigade, 2nd Division, District of Cairo, Department ofMissouri . Troops under his command captured a key Confederate artillery battery, which paved the way for the subsequent collapse of the defensive line in his sector.Cook later oversaw the military Department of Iowa and Dakota. In the winter of 1862-63, he organized a campaign against the
Sioux Nation , withSioux City, Iowa , as his base of operations. In the spring of 1863, he was relieved by Brig. Gen.Alfred Sully . In November 1864, he was assigned command of the military District of Illinois, replacingEleazar Paine , who had resigned the position. Cook was awarded the brevet rank of major general at the end of the war.Following the war, Cook returned home and was elected as Sangamon County's representative in the
Illinois General Assembly .He died in his home near
Ransom, Michigan , in 1910, and is interred atOak Ridge Cemetery in Springfield, Illinois.McCook Lake in
Union County, South Dakota , is named for General Cook (it is unclear why the Mc was added to his name). Cook had commanded Federal troops near there during the war.Fact|date=March 2008External links
*findagrave|20663 Retrieved on
2008-02-12 Persondata
NAME= Cook, John
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SHORT DESCRIPTION= Union Army General
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