- William Gilham
William Henry Gilham (
January 13 1818 -November 16 1872 ) was an Americansoldier ,teacher ,chemist , andauthor . A member of the faculty atVirginia Military Institute , in 1860, he wrote a military manual which was still in modern use 145 years later. He served in theConfederate Army during theAmerican Civil War , and became president of Southern Fertilizing Company in Richmond after the War.Childhood, education, military service
William Henry Gilham was born in
Vincennes, Indiana on January 13, 1818. his father's family came fromVirginia . He was appointed to theUnited States Military Academy atWest Point, New York , where he graduated 5th in the Class of 1840.He became a lieutenant in the 3rd Artillery in the
United States Army and fought in theSeminole War inFlorida . From September 1841 to August 1844, he was Assistant Professor of Natural and Experimental Philosophy at the U.S. Military Academy (West Point). He served in theMexican-American War in 1846. The degree of A. M. was conferred upon him byCollege of William and Mary inWilliamsburg, Virginia in 1852.Virginia Military Institute
In 1846, he became a professor at
Virginia Military Institute (VMI), then a recently-founded state military college inLexington, Virginia . During the next five years, he developed VMI's departments of Chemistry and Agriculture, taughtinfantry tactics and served as the Commandant of Cadets. To lighten the load on Major Gilham, in 1851, VMI hired another professor, Major Thomas Jonathon Jackson, later better known as "Stonewall" Jackson, who was also a graduate of West Point, and a veteran of the conflicts in Florida and Mexico.As a professor, Gilham was interested in geological matters. In 1857, his "Report on the Soil of
Powhatan County, Virginia " was published in Richmond by Ritchie & Dunnavant. A copy of a request he made to the same year for the legislature to fund acquisition of "a complete collection of minerals and fossils for the use of my classes" is in the collection of the Virginia Historical Society in Richmond. [ http://vhs3.vahistorical.org/starweb/x.marc/servlet.starweb ]Majors Gilham and Jackson taught together at VMI for the rest of the decade. In November 1859, at the request of the Virginia Governor
Henry A. Wise , Major Gilham led a contingent of the VMI Cadets Corps to Charles Town to provide an additional military presence for at the execution by hanging onDecember 2 ,1859 of militantabolitionist John Brown following his raid on the federal arsenal at Harper's Ferry. Major Jackson was placed in command of the artillery, consisting of two howitzers manned by 21 cadets.In response to the raid on Harper's Ferry, Governor Wise ordered Gilham to write a manual to train volunteers and militia. Finished in the fall of 1860, it was entitled "Manual of Instruction for the Volunteers and Militia of the United States" and was initially published in
Philadelphia .Family life
According to VMI records, while residing in Lexington, Major Gilham and his wife Cordelia Adelaide Hayden Gilham (1826-1913) had 7 children, 3 born after moving to Virginia. Their daughter
Emma Hayden Gilham (b. 1855) married William Nelson Page, acivil engineer who became co-founder of theVirginian Railway . [ http://www.vmi.edu/archives/local%5Fhistory/1860census.pdf ]American Civil War
In 1861, as the
American Civil War broke out, theConfederate Army had a lot of new recruits. Promoted to the rank ofcolonel , Gilham became the Commandant of Camp Lee, atRichmond, Virginia , the camp of instruction for thousands of Virginians. Gilham's manual proved to be the ideal book for the training of these young men.Col. Gilham briefly commanded a brigade in the field in 1861 and 1862, but returned to teaching at VMI. On
May 15 1864 , the VMI cadets participated in theBattle of New Market . Gilham was present, but did not command the young troops during the battle. After Union troops led by Union GeneralDavid Hunter raided Lexington, and burned buildings at VMI, the VMI cadets were stationed at Richmond for the remainder of the War. Major Gilham's house, a campus landmark, was later rebuilt to original specifications after the War. [ http://www1.vmi.edu/archivephotos/Details.asp?ACCNUM=2673&num=451&rform=list ]Post-war
After the War, VMI had no money to pay its instructors. Gilham went to work in Richmond for Southern Fertilizer Company, which occupied the former Confederate
Libby Prison facility near Richmond'sTobacco Row . One of the company's products, Gilham's Tobacco Fertilizer, was manufactured there. [ http://vhs3.vahistorical.org/starweb/x.marc/servlet.starweb ]William Gilham died in
Vermont onNovember 16 1872 , aged 54, of undisclosed causes. He was interred atLexington, Virginia 's Stonewall Jackson Memorial Cemetery.References
External links
* [http://www.library.ci.corpus-christi.tx.us/MexicanWar/gilhamw.htm Corpus Christi Texas Library, William Gilham page]
* [http://www.stonewallbrigade.com/articles_gilham.html Stonewall Brigade website, William Gilham: Soldier, Educator]
* [http://47thva.org/gilham/ online text of Gilham's "Manual of Instruction for the Volunteers and Militia of the United States"]
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