- Albin Francisco Schoepf
Albin Francisco Schoepf (March 1, 1822 – May 10, 1886) was an
Europe an-bornmilitary officer who became a Union brigadier general during theAmerican Civil War , best known as the commanding officer ofFort Delaware , a wartime camp for Confederate prisoners of war.Biography
Born in
Podgórze ,Poland , Schoepf graduated from theVienna Military Academy and served inHungary as a captain in theAustrian Army before resigning his commission and enlisting in the Hungarian revolutionary forces underLajos Kossuth . When Kossuth abdicated in 1849, Schoepf was exiled toTurkey , where he served with and trained the Ottoman Empire's army before emigrating to theUnited States in 1851.Befriended by
Joseph Holt , Schoepf served as a clerk first in the U.S. coast survey and later in the U.S. patent office and the war department (working under Holt). While working inWashington, D.C. Schoepf married Julie Bates Kesley in 1855; they eventually had nine children together.Appointed a brigadier general in September 1861, Schoepf fought his brigade coolly at Wildcat Mountain, repulsing Confederates under
Felix Zollicoffer , and his troops later killing Zollicoffer at Logan's Cross Roads. Proving himself an aggressive and able field commander, Schoepf was promoted to division command in August 1862, but often found himself at odds withArmy of the Ohio commanderDon Carlos Buell , especially after being denied orders to attack until late in theBattle of Perryville . Appointed to a board of inquiry investigating Buell during the campaign, Schoepf made no secret of his disapproval of Buell's actions, so much so that Buell raised Schoepf's hostility as an issue. Not wanting his involvement to affect the Buell investigation's outcome, Schoepf asked army commander Henry W. Halleck to transfer him to another assignment.On April 13, 1863, Schoepf was ordered to report to Fort Delaware as commanding officer and served the balance of the war in that command.
After the war, Schoepf returned to the patent office and died after a long illness, likely
stomach cancer . He is buried in theCongressional Cemetery in Washington, D.C.ee also
*List of American Civil War generals
References
*Boatner, Mark Mayo, III. "The Civil War Dictionary." New York: McKay, 1959; revised 1988. ISBN 0-8129-1726-X.
*Fetzer, Dale and Mowday, Bruce E. "Unlikely Allies: Fort Delaware's Prison Community in the Civil War." Mechanicsville, PA: Stackpole Books, 2000. ISBN 0-8117-1823-9.
*Welsh, Jack D. "Medical Histories of Union Generals." Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press, 1996. ISBN 0-87338-552-7.
*findagrave|4908 Retrieved on2008-08-04
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