- William Hicks Jackson
William Hicks "Red" Jackson (
October 1 ,1835 –March 30 ,1903 ) was acotton planter, horse breeder, and general in theConfederate States Army during theAmerican Civil War .Early life and career
Hicks was born in
Paris, Tennessee , a son of Dr. Alexander Jackson and Mary (Hurt) Jackson, the daughter of a Baptist minister, both natives ofVirginia . At the age of five, his family moved toJackson, Tennessee , where his father would be elected as a Whig to the state legislature and subsequently as Jackson's mayor. His brotherHowell Edmunds Jackson would become aUnited States Supreme Court Justice .He attended
West Tennessee College (nowUnion University ) before accepting an appointment to theUnited States Military Academy . He graduated from West Point in 1856 and was brevetted as a second lieutenant in the U.S. Army. He studied at thecavalry school atCarlisle Barracks and joined the mounted rifles. He served on frontier duty atFort Bliss inTexas in 1857, and engaged in a skirmish withKiowa s nearFort Craig inNew Mexico Territory . He participated in the Comanche and Kiowa Expedition of 1860.Civil War
When word came of
Tennessee 'ssecession , Jackson resigned from the Army onMay 16 ,1861 , and returned to the South to enroll in the Confederate army as a captain ofartillery . He was anaide-de-camp to General Gideon Pillow and served at theBattle of Belmont in November. In early 1862, Jackson was appointed as colonel of the 1st Tennessee Cavalry and rose to be chief of cavalry underJohn C. Pemberton ,Earl Van Dorn , and thenSterling Price . OnDecember 29 ,1862 , he was promoted to brigadier general.He served with distinction in the
Vicksburg Campaign in early 1863. In February, he commanded the cavalry ofLeonidas Polk in the campaign aroundMeridian, Mississippi . During theAtlanta Campaign that summer, Jackson commanded the cavalry division of theArmy of Mississippi . His troopers repeatedly skirmished In August with the Union cavalry ofH. Judson Kilpatrick , which was attempting to destroy railroads south of the city. Jackson won a significant victory at theBattle of Brown's Mill nearNewnan, Georgia . He continued to lead his divisoon through the Nashville and Murfreesboro campaign and then retreated toMississippi . In February 1865, he was assigned command of all cavalry from Tennessee in the force ofNathan Bedford Forrest . He successfully isolated the Union brigade ofJohn T. Croxton duringWilson's Raid in April.Postbellum career
movement. He also belonged to the Tennessee Agricultural and Mechanical Association, and sat on the Tennessee Bureau of Agriculture.
In 1886, Jackson and his older brother, jurist
Howell Edmunds Jackson , took over control of Belle Meade following their father-in-law William Giles Harding's death. They raised prize race horses. [ [http://www.tennessee.gov/tsla/history/manuscripts/findingaids/69-052.pdf Tennessee State Library and Archives] ] General Jackson purchased a stallion named Iroquois in 1886, the first American winner of theEpsom Derby .William H. Jackson died at Belle Meade in 1903 and was buried in the family's
mausoleum in the plantation's cemetery. In 1906, after the plantation was sold, he and other members of the Harding-Jackson family were reinterred in Mount Olivet Cemetery inNashville, Tennessee .References
* [http://www.tennessee.gov/tsla/history/manuscripts/findingaids/69-052.pdf Tennessee State Library and Archives]
Notes
External links
* [http://www.generalsandbrevets.com/sgj/jacksonwh.htm Jackson photo gallery]
* [http://www.bellemeadeplantation.com/page.cfm/pid/25 Belle Meade Plantation]
* [http://www.civil-war-tribute.com/William-Hicks-Jackson-bio.htm Jackson biography]Persondata
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