- William Farrar Smith
William Farrar Smith (
February 17 ,1824 –February 28 ,1903 ), was a civil engineer, a member of the police commission, and Union major general in theAmerican Civil War .Early life
Smith, known to his friends as "Baldy", was born at
St. Albans, Vermont , graduated from theUnited States Military Academy in 1845, and was assigned to the topographical engineers. He was twice assistant professor ofmathematics at West Point (1846–48 and 1855–56).Civil War
During the
First Battle of Bull Run , Smith served on the staff of Maj. Gen.Irvin McDowell . OnAugust 13 ,1861 , he became brigadier general of volunteers after helping organize the First Vermont Brigade. He was brevetted lieutenant colonel in the regular army for his gallantry at theBattle of White Oak Swamp in theSeven Days Battles . OnJuly 4 ,1862 , he received promotion to the rank of major general of volunteers. Smith led his division with conspicuous valor at Antietam, and was again brevetted in the regular army. When his corps commander, Maj. Gen.William B. Franklin , was reassigned to a superior command, Smith was placed at the head of the VI Corps of theArmy of the Potomac , which he led at the disastrousBattle of Fredericksburg .The recriminations that followed Fredericksburg led to a famous general order in which army commander Maj. Gen.
Ambrose Burnside proposed to dismiss several of the senior officers of the army. PresidentAbraham Lincoln prevented this order from taking effect and relieved Burnside of his command instead. Smith was one of the affected officers, but it is to his credit that he did not leave the Army. However, his indiscretion in communicating to Lincoln directly about Burnside's shortcomings, compounded by the fact that General Smith was a close friend of out-of-favor Maj. Gen.George B. McClellan , resulted in his losing both his corps command and his rank; the Senate failed to confirm his nomination to major general, which expired onMarch 4 ,1863 . So, returned to the rank of brigadier general, he commanded a division-sized force ofmilitia within theDepartment of the Susquehanna inPennsylvania during the critical days of theGettysburg Campaign , repelling Maj. Gen.J.E.B. Stuart at a skirmish in Carlisle. Smith's green troops then participated in the unsuccessful pursuit of Gen.Robert E. Lee back to thePotomac River . He followed this in division command inWest Virginia .On
October 3 ,1863 , Smith was assigned to duty as chief engineer of theArmy of the Cumberland (and a couple of weeks later, theMilitary Division of the Mississippi ). As such he conducted the engineer operations and launched theBattle of Wauhatchie , which opened the "Cracker Line" to provide supplies and reinforcements to the besieged troops in Chattanooga. Of this action the House Committee on Military Affairs reported in 1865 that "as a subordinate, General WF Smith had saved the Army of the Cumberland from capture, and afterwards directed it to victory." Smith was now again nominated for the rank of major general of volunteers, andUlysses S. Grant , who was much impressed with Smith's work, insisted strongly that the nomination should be confirmed, which was accordingly done by the Senate onMarch 9 ,1864 . Grant, according to his own statement "was not long in finding out that the objections to Smith's promotion were well grounded," but he never stated the grounds of his complaint, and Smith, in the "Battles and Leaders" series, maintained that they were purely of a personal character.For the
Overland Campaign of 1864, Smith was assigned by Grant to command the XVIII Corps in Maj. Gen. Benjamin Butler'sArmy of the James , which he led in theBattle of Cold Harbor and the first operations against Petersburg. Smith's corps and a division of black troops (under Edward W. Hinks) were ordered to take the city. Remembering the debacle at Cold Harbor, Smith performed exhaustive reconnaissance. Determining that the section of the defensive line was manned primarily by artillery, he ordered an attack. However, the attack was delayed and in the meantime he became apprehensive about a rumor circulating that Lee was about to arrive. He lost his nerve, perhaps because of the formidable character of the Confederate works or perhaps because of a recurring bout with malaria, but his hesitation may have lost him the opportunity to shorten the war by nearly a year. OnJuly 19 ,1864 , he was relieved from command of the XVIII Corps and he spent the remainder of the war on "special duty."Postbellum
Smith resigned from the volunteer service in 1865, and from the U.S. Army in 1867. From 1864 to 1873 he was president of the International Telegraph Company, and from 1875 to 1881 served on the board of police commissioners of
New York , becoming its president in 1877. After 1881 he was engaged in civil engineering work inPennsylvania . He died atPhiladelphia in 1903 and is buried inArlington National Cemetery . His "Autobiography of Major General William F. Smith, 1861 – 1864" was published posthumously in 1990.ee also
*List of American Civil War generals
References
* Eicher, John H., and Eicher, David J., "Civil War High Commands", Stanford University Press, 2001, ISBN 0-8047-3641-3.
* Warner, Ezra J., "Generals in Blue: Lives of the Union Commanders", Louisiana State University Press, 1964, ISBN 0-8071-0822-7.External links
* [http://www.arlingtoncemetery.net/wfsmith.htm Biography at Arlington National Cemetery]
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