- John D. Imboden
Infobox Military Person
name= John D. Imboden
lived= birth date|1823|2|16 – death date and age|1895|8|15|1823|2|16
placeofbirth=Staunton, Virginia
placeofdeath=Damascus, Virginia
caption= John Daniel Imboden
photo taken in the 1860's
nickname=
allegiance=Confederate States Army
serviceyears=1862–65
rank= Brigadier General
commands=
unit=
battles=American Civil War
*Gettysburg Campaign
*Valley Campaigns of 1864
awards=
laterwork= lawyer, writerJohn Daniel Imboden (
February 16 ,1823 –August 15 ,1895 ) was a lawyer, teacher,Virginia state legislator. During theAmerican Civil War , he was a Confederate cavalrygeneral and partisan fighter. After the war he returned to practicing law, began writing, and also was active in developing natural resources.Early life and career
Imboden, who pronounced his surname IPAEng|ɪmˈboʊdɛn, was born near
Staunton, Virginia , in theShenandoah Valley . He attended Washington College (nowWashington and Lee University ), but did not complete his degree. He taught at a school for the deaf, dumb, and blind, and then attended law school and became a lawyer in Staunton. He was twice elected to the House of Delegates of theVirginia General Assembly . Imboden also was active in the creation of the Staunton Artillery while serving in Virginia's militia.Dupuy, p. 363.]Civil War service
Despite having no military training, Imboden received a commission as captain in the Staunton Artillery of the Virginia State Militia on
November 28 ,1859 . He commanded the unit during the capture of Harpers Ferry. While commanding an artillery battery at theFirst Battle of Bull Run , Imboden perforated his left eardrum firing an artillery piece, causing subsequent deafness in that ear. OnSeptember 9 ,1862 , Imboden left the artillery to recruit a battalion of partisan rangers and was promoted to colonel of the 62nd Virginia Mounted Infantry (1st Partisan Rangers). He fought with Maj. Gen. Thomas J. "Stonewall" Jackson in theValley Campaign at Cross Keys and Port Republic. He was promoted to brigadier general onJanuary 28 ,1863 .Eicher, p. 363.]Along with Brig. Gen. William E. "Grumble" Jones, Imboden led the famous Jones-Imboden raid of 3,400 troopers into northwestern Virginia against the
B & O Railroad , destroying rail track and bridges. During the raid he also captured thousands of horses and heads of cattle and ruined thepetroleum fields in theKanawha Valley . This raid covered convert|400|mi|km in 37 days. In theGettysburg Campaign , Imboden's brigade served under Maj. Gen.J.E.B. Stuart as the rearguard for Gen.Robert E. Lee 's movement north through the Shenandoah Valley. (His brigade did not participate in Stuart's foray away from Lee's army, but instead raided theBaltimore and Ohio Railroad inBedford County, Pennsylvania .) They spent theBattle of Gettysburg guarding ammunition and supply trains inChambersburg, Pennsylvania . During the Confederate retreat, Imboden was in charge of escorting the wagon trains of thousands of wounded soldiers back to Virginia. OnJuly 6 ,1863 , thePotomac River was flooding atWilliamsport, Maryland , and Imboden's wagon train was trapped. He put together a defensive force that included an artillery battery and as many of the wounded who could operate muskets. This hastily organized force turned back attacks from Union cavalry generalsJohn Buford andJudson Kilpatrick , saving the wagon train. Robert E. Lee praised Imboden for the way in which he "gallantly repulsed" the Union cavalry.Returning to the Shenandoah Valley, Imboden responded to a request from General Lee to distract the enemy in his front by leading a raid on the vulnerable Union detachment at
Charlestown, West Virginia , onOctober 18 ,1863 at theBattle of Charlestown . Imboden reported, Quote|The surprise was complete, the enemy having no suspicion of our approach until I had the town entirely surrounded. ... To my demand for a surrender Colonel Simpson requested an hour for consideration. I offered him five minutes, to which he replied, 'Take us if you can'. I immediately opened on the buildings with artillery at less than 200 yards, and with half a dozen shells drove out the enemy into the streets, when he formed and fled toward Harper's Ferry.| Union Brig. Gen.Jeremiah Cutler Sullivan soon sent a rescue column from nearby Harpers Ferry and drove Imboden back up the valley. Sullivan reported, "The cavalry came up with the enemy this side of Charlestown, and drove them through the town. Artillery coming up, drove them about 4 miles. A portion of infantry force..., reaching them, the enemy were driven from every position they took, to near Berryville."Imboden and
John C. Breckinridge 's forces defeated Union Maj. Gen.Franz Sigel 's command at theBattle of New Market onMay 15 ,1864 . He returned to Virginia and commanded abrigade in Maj. Gen.Robert Ransom 's cavalry division of the Second Corps of theArmy of Northern Virginia under Lt. Gen.Jubal A. Early in theValley Campaigns of 1864 . He was incapacitated bytyphoid fever and left the active cavalry service.Beginning on
January 2 ,1865 , Imboden commanded Camp Millen, Georgia, then the prison camp atAiken, South Carolina as well as other prison camps in Georgia,Alabama , andMississippi throughout 1865 until the end of the war. He was paroled inAugusta, Georgia onMay 3 of that year.Postbellum
After the war, Imboden moved to
Richmond, Virginia , where he resumed his work as a lawyer, serving first in Richmond and then in Abingdon, thecounty seat of Washington County. Around 1886, he moved to southwestern Virginia and where he hoped to mine coal and iron ore deposits atDamascus, Virginia , a town he founded, which became a lumber center in the late 19th and early 20th century. [ [http://damascus.org/history.html Damascus, Virginia, history website] ] He died in Damascus in 1895, and is buried in the Generals section ofHollywood Cemetery in Richmond, Virginia.References
* Dupuy, Trevor N., Johnson, Curt, and Bongard, David L., "Harper Encyclopedia of Military Biography", Castle Books, 1992, 1st Ed., ISBN 0-7858-0437-4.
* Eicher, John H., and Eicher, David J., "Civil War High Commands", Stanford University Press, 2001, ISBN 0-8047-3641-3.Notes
External links
* [http://valley.vcdh.virginia.edu/memory/augustamemory.html Articles by Imboden about battles he fought]
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