- Henry Heth
Infobox Military Person
name=Henry "Harry" Heth
lived= birth date|1825|12|16 – death date and age|1899|9|27|1825|12|16
caption= Photograph of Heth taken in the 1860's.
nickname=
placeofbirth= Black Heath,Virginia
placeofdeath=Washington, D.C.
allegiance=United States of America Confederate States of America
branch=United States Army Confederate States Army
serviceyears= 1847–61 (USA)
1861–65 (CSA)
rank=Captain (USA)Major General (CSA)
unit=
commands=
battles= U.S. actions against theSioux
*Battle of Ash Hollow American Civil War
*Battle of Chancellorsville
*Battle of Gettysburg
*Siege of Petersburg
awards=
relations=
laterwork=Henry "Harry" Heth (PronEng|ˈhiːθ, not IPA|/ˈhɛθ/;
December 16 ,1825 –September 27 ,1899 ) was a careerU.S. Army officer and a Confederategeneral in theAmerican Civil War . He is best-remembered for precipitating theBattle of Gettysburg , accomplished inadvertently while sending some of his troops of theArmy of Northern Virginia to the small Pennsylvania village, according to his memoirs, seeking shoes.Early life
Heth was born at Black Heath in
Chesterfield County, Virginia , son ofU.S. Navy CaptainJohn Heth , and Margaret L. Pickett. He was a cousin ofGeorge Pickett . He usually went by "Harry", the name also preferred by his grandfather,American Revolutionary War Colonel Henry Heth, who had established the Heth family in thecoal business in theVirginia Colony after emigrating from England about 1759.He was one of the few generals whom
Robert E. Lee called by his first name. Heth graduated from theUnited States Military Academy at the bottom of his class in 1847; he was wounded at West Point in 1846 with abayonet stab to his leg. He was commissioned a brevetsecond lieutenant and assigned to the 1st U.S. Infantryregiment . His antebellum career was served primarily in western posts, some as aquartermaster , and he eventually achieved the rank ofcaptain . He played a prominent role in the 1855Battle of Ash Hollow against theSioux . In 1858, he created the first marksmanship manual for the Army.Civil War
After the war began at
Fort Sumter , Heth resigned from the U.S. Army and joined theConfederate States Army . He was promoted to lieutenant colonel and served for a brief time as Robert E. Lee's quartermaster in the Virginia Provisional Army, but that time was influential for his career, because Lee looked out for Harry for the rest of the war. He spent the remainder of 1861 in the Kanawha Valley in western Virginia in the 5th and 45th Virginia Infantry regiments. He was promoted to brigadier general onJanuary 6 ,1862 , and sent west to the Department ofEast Tennessee , to serve under Kirby Smith. During the Kentucky Campaign, he was sent by Smith to take a division north fromLexington, Kentucky , to make a "demonstration" onCincinnati ; although this caused a great commotion in the city's defenses, only a few skirmishes occurred. [Noe, pp. 86-87.]In March 1863, Lee brought Heth back into his command, the
Army of Northern Virginia , as abrigade commander in Maj. Gen.A.P. Hill 's division. He fought in theBattle of Chancellorsville , showing aggressive, but misguided, qualities in his first large-scale combat, attacking without reserves against a Union force emerging fromthe Wilderness . He assumed temporary command of the division when Hill was wounded. Following the death of Thomas J. "Stonewall" Jackson, Lee reorganized his army into threecorps , promoting Hill to the Third Corps. Heth retained his division command and was promoted to major general onMay 24 ,1863 .Heth's division made history by inadvertently starting the
Battle of Gettysburg . Marching east from Cashtown onJuly 1 ,1863 , Heth sent two brigades ahead in a reconnaissance in force. His memoirs referred to sending them in a search for shoes in Gettysburg, but some historians consider this an apocryphal story; Heth knew thatJubal A. Early had been in Gettysburg a few days earlier and any available shoes would have been taken at that time. Besides, sending two brigades on such a scavenger hunt would have been wasteful. Heth's true motivation remains hidden to history. The brigades made contact with Unioncavalry under Brig. Gen.John Buford and spread out into battle formation.Lee had ordered A.P. Hill to avoid a general engagement with the enemy before he could assemble his full army, but Heth's actions had now rendered that order moot. They were engaged and Union reinforcements started arriving quickly. Heth's decision to deploy his two brigades before the arrival of the rest of his division was an error as well; they were repulsed in hard fighting against a crack division of the
Army of the Potomac 's I Corps, including the famously tenaciousIron Brigade . After a lull in fighting, Heth brought two more brigades into the fray in the afternoon and the Union forces were driven back toSeminary Ridge , but principally because the Union corps' right flank was crushed byRichard S. Ewell 's corps coming in from the north. Finally, Heth attacked again in conjunction with the division of Lt. Gen.Robert E. Rodes and the Union corps was routed, retreating back through town toCemetery Hill . But Confederate losses were severe; Heth should have better coordinated his attack with the division of Maj. Gen. Dorsey Pender. Heth was wounded during the attack when a bullet struck him in the head. Fortunately for him, he was wearing a hat that was too large and stuffed with papers to make it fit. The papers probably deflected the bullet to avoid a fatal wound, but Heth was knocked unconscious and effectively out of the battle. Parts of his division, under the command of Brig. Gen.Johnston Pettigrew , saw more action two days later inPickett's Charge and he recovered enough to command during the retreat back to Virginia and the minor engagements of the fall of 1863.Harry Heth commanded his division through the 1864
Overland Campaign , theSiege of Petersburg , and the retreat of theAppomattox Campaign toAppomattox Court House , where he surrendered with Lee onApril 9 ,1865 .Postbellum
After the war, Heth worked in the insurance business and later served the government as a surveyor and in the
Office of Indian Affairs . He died inWashington, D.C. , and is buried inHollywood Cemetery inRichmond, Virginia .In popular media
Heth was portrayed by Warren Burton in the 1993 film "Gettysburg", based on Michael Shaara's novel, "
The Killer Angels ".elected works
*"A System of Target Practice" (published in 1858)
*"The Memoirs of Henry Heth" (posthumous, 1974).References
*Berg, Andrew, "The Best Offense", "Smithsonian Magazine", September 2005.
*Eicher, John H., and Eicher, David J., "Civil War High Commands",Stanford University Press , 2001, ISBN 0-8047-3641-3.
*Noe, Kenneth W., "Perryville: This Grand Havoc of Battle",University Press of Kentucky , 2001, ISBN 978-0-8131-2209-0.
*Tagg, Larry, [http://www.rocemabra.com/~roger/tagg/generals/ "The Generals of Gettysburg"] , Savas Publishing, 1998, ISBN 1-882810-30-9.Notes
External links
*Find A Grave|id=8337 Retrieved on
2007-12-15
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.