- George S. Greene
George Sears Greene (
May 6 ,1801 –January 28 ,1899 ) was a civil engineer and a Union General during theAmerican Civil War . He was part of the Greene family ofRhode Island , which had a distinguished military record for theUnited States . His greatest contribution during the war was his defense of the Union right flank atCulp's Hill during theBattle of Gettysburg . As a civilian, he was a founder of the American Society of Civil Engineers and Architects and was responsible for numerous railroads and aqueduct construction projects in the northeastern United States.Early life
Greene was born in
Apponaug, Rhode Island , one of nine children of Caleb and Sarah Robinson Wicks Greene. [Palmer, p. 21. Other sources spell Sarah's maiden name as Weeks or Wickes.] His family had roots in the founding of Rhode Island and in theAmerican Revolutionary War , including GeneralNathanael Greene , George's second cousin. [Mierka, n.p.] Caleb was a financially shrewd ship owner and merchant, but theEmbargo Act of 1807 , which prohibited U.S. vessels from carrying goods to other countries, and theWar of 1812 left his family in financial difficulties.Motts, pp. 63-75.] Young George attended Wrentham Academy and then a Latin grammar school in Providence and hoped to attendBrown University there, but his impoverished father could not afford it, so he moved toNew York City and found work in a dry goods store on Pearl Street. [Palmer, pp. 22-23.]In the New York store, Greene met major
Sylvanus Thayer , superintendent of theUnited States Military Academy , who recommended him to the Secretary of War for appointment to the academy. Greene enteredWest Point at age 18 and graduated second of 35 cadets in the class of 1823. (Classmates of Greene's included future Union Adjutant GeneralLorenzo Thomas ,Joseph K. Mansfield ,David Hunter ,Dennis Hart Mahan , andAlbert Sidney Johnston .) Top graduates of the academy generally chose the Engineers as their branch, but Greene decided on the artillery and was commissioned a second lieutenant in the 3rd U.S. Artillery regiment. However, due to his excellent academic performance, he stayed at the academy until 1827 as an assistant professor of mathematics and as a principal assistant professor of engineering. One of the students he taught during this period was CadetRobert E. Lee . [Palmer, pp. 28-29.]In the summer of 1828 Greene married Mary Elizabeth Vinton, sister of his best friend at West Point, David Vinton. Elizabeth gave birth to three children over the next four years: Mary Vinton, George Sears, and Francis Vinton Greene. While assigned to Fort Sullivan in
Maine in 1833, tragedy struck Greene's family: Elizabeth and all three of their children died within a seven months, probably fromtuberculosis . To ease the pain on his mind and to escape the isolation and loneliness of peacetime Army garrison duty, he immersed himself in study of both the law and medicine, coming close to professional certification in both by the time he resigned his commission in 1836 to become a civil engineer. [Palmer, pp. 31-33.]Greene built railroads in six states and designed municipal sewage and water systems for
Washington, D.C. ,Detroit , and several other cities. In New York City, he designed theCroton Aqueduct reservoir inCentral Park and the enlarged High Bridge over theHarlem River . He was one of twelve founders in New York City of the American Society of Civil Engineers and Architects. While on a trip to Maine for railroad surveying, he met Martha Barrett Dana, daughter ofSamuel Dana , a prominent Massachusetts politician. They were married inCharlestown, Massachusetts , onFebruary 21 ,1837 . They had six children together, including four sons who volunteered for the Union during the Civil War, one daughter, and one son who died in infancy. [Palmer, pp. 34-47.]Civil War
Despite being over 60 years old and having been out of the Army for 25 years, the crisis of the Union compelled Greene to seek to rejoin the service. He was essentially apolitical and was not an
abolitionist , but he was a firm believer in restoring the Union. He was appointed colonel of the 60th New York Infantry regiment onJanuary 18 ,1862 .Eicher, p. 266.] The regiment of upstate New Yorkers had been dissatisfied with their colonel and the company commanders had petitioned for his removal. GovernorEdwin D. Morgan , although initially reluctant to appoint Greene because of his age, saw his 13 years of regular army experience as a solution to his political/military problem. During this period, Governor John A. Andrew of Massachusetts was also prepared to offer Greene a regiment, but Greene chose to serve New York. The officers of the 60th were dismayed when the elderly, gray-haired man reported for duty. They had requested that their lieutenant colonel be promoted, which would have raised many of them in rank themselves. [Palmer, pp. 54-55.]On
April 28 ,1862 , Greene was appointed brigadier general of volunteers and served on the staff of Maj. Gen.Nathaniel Banks in the Shenandoah Valley campaign againstStonewall Jackson . At age 61, Greene was one of the oldest generals in the Union army and his troops took to calling him "Old Man" or "Pap" Greene. (There were actually 17 general officers in the Civil War older than Greene.) However, his age did not keep him from being one of the most aggressive commanders in the army. He commanded the 3rd Brigade, 2nd Division, II Corps, of theArmy of Virginia at theBattle of Cedar Mountain during theNorthern Virginia Campaign . Attacked by a Confederate force three times the size of his own, Greene and his men refused to give ground, holding out until the neighboring Union units were forced to withdraw. His division commander, Brig. Gen.John W. Geary , received a severe wound during the action and Greene took command of the division temporarily.Greene was again temporarily elevated to command of his division, now designated part of the XII Corps of the
Army of the Potomac , at theBattle of Antietam . His division's three brigades were led by junior officers who had survived Cedar Mountain. [ [http://aotw.org/exhibit.php?exhibit_id=134 Greene's report from Antietam] .] Even though XII Corps commander Brig. Gen.Joseph K. Mansfield was killed shortly after the fighting began, Greene led a crushing attack against the Confederates near the Dunker Church, achieving the farthest penetration of Maj. Gen. Stonewall Jackson's lines than any Union unit. Under immense pressure, Greene held his small division (only 1,727 men engaged at the start of the day) [Palmer, p. 80.] in advance of the rest of the Army for four hours, but eventually withdrew after suffering heavy losses. While the division was posted toHarpers Ferry , Greene took a three-week sick leave. Maj. Gen.Oliver O. Howard speculated that Greene, like many of his fellow officers, was sickened by the stench of dead and wounded at Antietam. When he returned, there was a new division commander, Brig. Gen. Geary. Greene was disgruntled that Geary, with only a few days seniority over him, was selected for the post; Geary had been wounded at Cedar Mountain and his combat record was not as good, but his political connections and a sentiment that a wounded officer should not be set back in his career unnecessarily, gave him the nod. [Palmer, pp. 99-100.]Greene resumed command of the 3rd Brigade, which was involved in minor skirmishes in northern Virginia and not engaged at the
Battle of Fredericksburg in December. [Palmer, pp. 105-07.] At theBattle of Chancellorsville in May 1863, his brigade was in the center of the line. When the Union right—the XI Corps—collapsed, Greene's brigade was subjected to enfilade artillery fire and then infantry assaults. He had ordered his men to fortify their positions 200 yards to their front usingabatis and trenches and they were able to hold out against several Confederate assaults, although losing 528 men of 2,032 engaged. During part of the battle, Greene once again assumed temporary command of the division when Geary was wounded again.Gettysburg
.] The
Battle of Gettysburg was the highlight of Greene's military career. OnJuly 2 ,1863 , Maj. Gen.George G. Meade shifted almost the entire XII Corps from the Union right to strengthen the left flank, which was under heavy attack. Greene's lone brigade of 1,350 New Yorkers (five regiments) was left to defend a one-half-mile line onCulp's Hill when an entire Confederate division attacked.Kuhl, pp. 880-83.] Fortunately, Greene had previously demonstrated good sense (as befits a civil engineer) by insisting that his troops construct strong field fortifications, despite a lack of interest in doing so from his division commander, Geary, and corps commander, Maj. Gen.Henry W. Slocum . In Greene's finest moment of the war, his preparations proved decisive and his brigade held off multiple attacks for hours. He was active the entire engagement rallying his men to defend their positions in the darkness. Brig. Gen.Alpheus Williams , acting corps commander on July 2, commended Greene for his "skill and judgment" in this defense, especially in his using the "advantages" of his position. [ [http://www.civilwarhome.com/awilliamsgettysburgor.htm Williams's report from Gettysburg] .] Late at night, the rest of the XII Corps returned to Culp's Hill. The fighting resumed the next morning and raged for over seven hours, but the Union troops held Culp's Hill. They regained some of the lost ground and thwarted renewed Confederate attacks. The battle for Culp's Hill included the two oldest generals in each army, Greene at 62 and Brig. Gen.William "Extra Billy" Smith at 65.The desperate fighting on the Union right flank was as important as the more famous defense of the Union left flank on
July 2 , by Col.Strong Vincent 's brigade onLittle Round Top . In fact, given that the Union line was only 400 yards from the vital Union supply line on the Baltimore Pike, it can be argued that it was more important. However, Greene's contribution to this critical battle have never been widely heralded, principally because of a dispute between Meade and Slocum over the filing of their official reports. But a member of Greene's brigade wrote: [Murray, p. 55.]Western Theater
In the fall of 1863, the XII Corps was transferred to the West to reinforce the Union forces besieged at Chattanooga. At the
Battle of Wauhatchie , during a surprise night attack by the Confederate forces, Greene was wounded in the face, with his jaw crushed and some teeth carried away. Subsequent surgery was not able to correct his condition and he suffered from the effects of his wound for the rest of his life. After six weeks of medical leave, he was assigned to light court-martial duty until January 1865, when he joined Maj. Gen.William T. Sherman 's army inNorth Carolina . Serving initially on the staff of Maj. Gen.Jacob D. Cox , he participated in the battle at Kinston, where he had his horse shot out from under him. At the very end of the war Greene was in command of the 3rd Brigade inAbsalom Baird 's 3rd Division, XIV Corps, and participated in the capture of Raleigh and the pursuit of Gen.Joseph E. Johnston 's army until its surrender.Postbellum career
After the war, Greene served on court-martial duty for a year and then returned to civil engineering in New York and Washington, D.C. From 1867 to 1871 he was the chief engineer commissioner of the Croton Aqueduct Department in New York. At the age of 86, he inspected the entire 30-mile Croton Aqueduct structure on foot.Murray, p. 61.] He served as president of the
American Society of Civil Engineers from 1875 to 1877 and president of the New York Genealogical and Biographical Society. He was appointed to West Point's Board of Visitors in 1881.By 1892, Greene was the oldest surviving Union general and the oldest living graduate of West Point. He petitioned the
United States Congress for an engineer captain's pension that would be of help to his family after his death. The best that Congress was willing to do was arranged by Congressman and Gettysburg veteranDaniel E. Sickles of New York, a first lieutenant's pension, based on the highest rank Greene had achieved in theregular army . OnAugust 18 ,1894 , Greene took the oath of office as a first lieutenant of artillery and became, at 93, the oldest lieutenant in the U.S. Army for 48 hours. Veterans inMOLLUS declared that he was the oldest lieutenant in world history.Legacy
Greene died at age 98 in
Morristown, New Jersey , and was buried in the Greene family cemetery inWarwick, Rhode Island , with a two-ton boulder from Culp's Hill placed above his grave. He is memorialized with a statue erected in 1906 by the State of New York on Culp's Hill in Gettysburg National Military Park.Greene's wife Martha died in 1883 at an age of 74. Their oldest son, Lieutenant
Samuel Dana Greene , was the executive officer on theironclad ship USS "Monitor" during the famousBattle of Hampton Roads . Another of their sons,Francis V. Greene , commanded a brigade at the Battle of Manila during theSpanish-American War . A third, Charles Thurston Greene, was a lieutenant on his father's staff at Culp's Hill. Later in 1863, Charles was wounded by an artillery shell and his leg was amputated, but he remained on active service until 1870. George Sears Greene, Jr., volunteered to serve but was not allowed to do so by his father so he could survive and carry on the family name. [Murray, pp. 59-61.]A description of George Sears Greene from Lt. George K. Collins of the 149th New York Infantry sums up the general: [Murray, p. 4.]
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.
* Kuhl, Paul E., "George Sears Greene", "Encyclopedia of the American Civil War: A Political, Social, and Military History", Heidler, David S., and Heidler, Jeanne T., eds., W. W. Norton & Company, 2000, ISBN 0-393-04758-X.
* Mierka, G. A., [http://www.geocities.com/amierka/gsgreene.html "Rhode Island's Own: U.S. Major General George Sears Greene"] .
* Motts, Wayne E., "To Gain a Second Star: The Forgotten George S. Greene", "Gettysburg Magazine", July 1990, pp. 63-75.
* Murray, R. L., "A Perfect Storm of Lead, George Sears Greene's New York Brigade in Defense of Culp's Hill", Benedum Books, 2000, ISBN 0-9646261-2-8.
* Palmer, David W., "The Forgotten Hero of Gettysburg", Xlibris, 2004, ISBN 1-4134-6633-8.
* Tagg, Larry, [http://www.rocemabra.com/~roger/tagg/generals/ "The Generals of Gettysburg"] , Savas Publishing, 1998, ISBN 1-882810-30-9.Notes
External links
*findagrave|5830987 Retrieved on
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