- Joseph F. Knipe
Joseph Farmer Knipe (
March 30 ,1823 –August 18 ,1901 ) was a brigadier general in theUnion Army during theAmerican Civil War . His troops won a decisive victory in late 1864 that helped clear Tennessee of Confederates during theFranklin-Nashville Campaign .Joseph F. Knipe was born to a blacksmith and his wife in
Mount Joy, Pennsylvania . As a youth, he was apprenticed to a cobbler in Philadelphia. In 1842, he left his employment and enlisted in theUnited States Army in the 2nd U.S. Artillery. He rose to the rank of Sergeant and served in theMexican-American War . He was discharged in 1847 and took employment with the fledgling railroad industry in Harrisburg. Later he was involved in the mercantile business. Knipe enrolled in the Pennsylvania statemilitia and became a major andaide-de-camp to Brig. Gen. Edward Williams.With the bombardment of
Fort Sumter in April 1861 and the subsequent Federal call for troops to put down the rebellion, volunteers flocked to Harrisburg to enlist in Pennsylvania's newly commissionedregiment s. Williams and Knipe selected the site for the state's new military training center,Camp Curtin . In September 1861, GovernorAndrew Curtin commissioned Knipe as a colonel and authorized him to raise the46th Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry . After cursory training, Knipe's regiment was assigned to garrison duty at Harper's Ferry.In the spring of 1862, Knipe fought in the
Valley Campaign againstStonewall Jackson 's forces. He was wounded at the First Battle of Winchester. He was again wounded at theBattle of Cedar Mountain . Due to the chain of command changes necessitated during theBattle of Antietam by the death of XII Corps commanderJoseph K. Mansfield , Knipe took command of thebrigade ofSamuel W. Crawford in the first division. Crawford had taken command of the division whenAlpheus Williams became acting corps commander.On
April 15 ,1863 , Knipe was promoted to brigadier general, backdated to November 1862. He led first brigade first division XII Corps underAlpheus Williams at theBattle of Chancellorsville . Suffering from lingering effects from his wounds and a bout withmalaria , he temporarily left theArmy of the Potomac and returned to Harrisburg. He took command of a brigade of inexperiencedNew York militia and led it in pursuit of the retreatingArmy of Northern Virginia following theBattle of Gettysburg .Returning to his XII Corps brigade, Knipe went to the Western Theater and served in the
Atlanta Campaign . He took command of a division of Unioncavalry duringJohn Bell Hood 's incursion into Tennessee, and captured 6,000 Confederates and eight battleflags in a decisive victory over the retreatingArmy of Tennessee following theBattle of Nashville .Following the war, Knipe returned to Harrisburg, where he was appointed
postmaster by PresidentAndrew Johnson . He subsequently held a number of politicalpatronage positions the rest of his life, both on the Federal and state level. For a term, he was postmaster of theUnited States House of Representatives .Knipe died at the age of 78 and was buried in the Harrisburg Cemetery.
ee also
References
* [http://www.campcurtin.org/campcurtin/vol14_2.pdf Camp Curtin Historical Society biography]
*AppletonsExternal links
* [http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=5894638 Find-a-Grave]
* [http://www.generalsandbrevets.com/ngk/knipe.htm Photo gallery of Knipe]Persondata
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