- John T. Croxton
John Thomas Croxton (
November 20 ,1836 –April 16 ,1874 ) was an attorney, a general in theUnion Army during theAmerican Civil War , and apostbellum U.S. diplomat.Early life and career
John T. Croxton was born near
Paris, Kentucky , in rural Bourbon County. He was the oldest son among the twelve children of a Virginia-born wealthyplantation owner and slave owner. In 1857, he graduated with honors fromYale University , where he was a member of the secretiveSkull and Bones Society . He subsequently studied law under prominent attorney James Robinson and eventually joined theFreemasonry movement.Croxton was admitted to the bar and taught law courses at a school in
Mississippi in 1858. He returned to Kentucky the following year and established a profitable law practice in Paris, as well as owning a small farm outside of town. He married Catherine Rogers (1833-1882) and raised three daughters. His ardent support for the emancipation of slaves alienated him from much of his family.Civil War
In October 1861, as the Civil War escalated, President
Abraham Lincoln appointed Croxton as the lieutenant colonel of the 4th Kentucky Mounted Infantry. He saw his first significant fighting in theBattle of Mill Springs . He later rose to itscolonel in early 1862, and fought at Perryville. OnSeptember 19 ,1863 , hisinfantry brigade tangled with Confederatecavalry underNathan Bedford Forrest , touching off theBattle of Chickamauga . Croxton was wounded during the fighting. He suffered a leg wound at theBattle of Nashville .In 1864, he was promoted to brigadier general at the age of 27, leading a cavalry brigade in the
Army of the Cumberland during theAtlanta Campaign . His cavalry was active in Alabama during the final months of the war. OnApril 4 ,1865 , his force of 1,500 men seized Tuscaloosa, strengthening the Union army's grip on central Alabama and eliminating one of the Confederacy's last major supply and munitions centers. In the process, they burned most of theUniversity of Alabama 's buildings, as well as much of the town's industry and warehouses.Postbellum career
In the omnibus promotions following the cessation of hostilities, Croxton was brevetted as a major general. He was then appointed to command the District of Southwest Georgia as provincial governor until he resigned on
December 26 ,1865 .After his resignation from the army, Croxton returned to his Kentucky law practice and became a staunch supporter of the Republican Party. In 1872, he was appointed by President
Ulysses S. Grant as the U.S. Minister toBolivia and moved his family toLa Paz . He died there in office in 1874, suffering fromconsumption . His remains were shipped home and buried in Paris Cemetery in Paris, Kentucky.External links
* [http://www.generalsandbrevets.com/ngc/croxton.htm Croxton photo gallery]
*findagrave|5894083 Retrieved on2008-02-12
* [http://www.croxton.net/chronicles/ccI-5.html The Croxton Chronicles]Further reading
* Miller, Rex, "Croxton's Raid". Fort Collins, Colorado: Old Army Press, 1979. ISBN 0883422441 .
Persondata
NAME= Croxton, John T.
ALTERNATIVE NAMES=
SHORT DESCRIPTION= Union Army General
DATE OF BIRTH=
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