- George Maney
George Earl Maney (
August 24 ,1826 –February 9 ,1901 ) was an American soldier, politician, railroad executive and diplomat. He was a general in theConfederate States Army during theAmerican Civil War and apostbellum U.S.ambassador toColombia ,Bolivia ,Uruguay , andParaguay .Early life and career
George Maney was born in
Franklin, Tennessee , to Judge Thomas Maney, a prominent newspaper editor and circuit judge. Young Maney attended the Nashville Seminary before graduating from theUniversity of Nashville in 1845. He enlisted as asecond lieutenant in the 1st Tennessee Regiment during theMexican-American War . When his three-months term of enlistment expired, he enrolled in theU.S. Army and served as afirst lieutenant in the 3rd U.S. Dragoons, which participated in GeneralWinfield Scott 's march toMexico City . [S. Warner, pp. 130-135.]When hostilities ceased, Maney returned home. He studied law, passed his bar exam in 1850, and established a prosperous law practice in Franklin. He subsequently became a politician, being elected to the
Tennessee State Legislature . [ Winborne, p. 111-12.] He married Elizabeth T. "Betty" Crutcher of Nashville in 1853 and raised a family of five children.Civil War
Following the
secession of Tennessee and the beginning of the Civil War, Maney enlisted in the Confederate army as a captain in the 11th Tennessee Volunteer Infantry. OnMay 6 ,1861 , he became colonel of the 1st Tennessee. He served in western Virginia first underRobert E. Lee at theBattle of Cheat Mountain and later under Thomas J. "Stonewall" Jackson at Bath and Romney. [E. Warner, p. 210.]Maney asked for a reassignment to his native Tennessee, which was threatened by Union forces. As an officer in the
Army of Tennessee , Maney participated in theBattle of Shiloh and was promoted onApril 16 ,1862 , to brigadier general. He led hisbrigade in the battles of Perryville, Chickamauga, and Murfreesboro. In November 1863, he was wounded severely in his arm during the Chattanooga Campaign. He was on medical leave for much of the rest of the year.In 1864, Maney commanded a division in
William J. Hardee 'scorps during theAtlanta Campaign . He was captured in August and later released, but he did not return to active field duty because of lingering problems with his wounded arm. Hardee recommended that Maney be promoted to major general, but the request was not fulfilled. Maney surrendered following theCarolinas Campaign and was paroled onMay 1 ,1865 , atGreensboro, North Carolina .Postbellum career
After the war, Maney returned to his Tennessee home. He became president of the
Tennessee and Pacific Railroad in 1868, serving in that executive post for nine years. Unlike many of his former Confederate compatriots, he became an active Republican. He was elected to the state senate. During thecarpetbagger era, Maney held considerable influence over theGovernor of Tennessee ,Dewitt Clinton Senter . Maney helped restore the government to former Confederates once theircivil rights were restored.Maney became active in a number of reconciliation efforts during Reconstruction, working to improve relations between the former enemies. In early 1876, he was a candidate for governor, but withdrew his name from the ballot. In December of that year, his daughter Frances married a former Union officer in the 15th Massachusetts.
During the presidential administrations of
James A. Garfield ,Chester Arthur , andBenjamin Harrison , Maney was an ambassador to various countries inSouth America . He was the U.S. minister to Colombia (1881-1882), and then was the Minister Resident/Consul General to Bolivia fromNovember 4 ,1882 , untilJune 1 ,1883 . He returned home and was a delegate to theRepublican National Convention s of 1884 and 1888. He spent four years (1890-1894) as the U.S. ambassador to Uraguay and Paraguay.General George Maney died in
Washington, D.C. , from a cerebral hemorrhage. [Welsh, p. 153.] He is buried in Mount Olivet Cemetery inNashville, Tennessee .References
* Warner, Ezra J., "Generals in Gray: Lives of the Confederate Commanders", Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1959. ISBN 0807108235.
* Warner, Seth, "George Earl Maney: Soldier, Railroader, and Diplomat," "Tennessee Historical Quarterly", Vol. LXV (2006), 130-147.
* Welsh, Jack D., "Medical Histories of Confederate Generals". Kent, Ohio: Kent State University, 1995. ISBN 0873386493.
* Winborne, Benjamin Brodie, "The Colonial and State Political History of Hereford County, N.C.", Murfreesboro, North Carolina: Edwards & Broughton, 1906.Notes
External links
* [http://www.generalsandbrevets.com/sgm/maney.htm Photo gallery of Maney]
* [http://www.libarts.ucok.edu/history/faculty/roberson/course/1493/supplements/chp17/17.%20George%20Earl%20Maney.%20Soldier.%20Diploat.htm American National Biography]Further reading
* Hewitt, Lawrence L. (edited by William C. Davis), "George Earl Maney," "The Confederate General", Vol. 4. Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: 1991.
succession box
title = United States Minister Resident, Colombia
before =Ernest Dichman
after =William L. Scruggs
years =September 21 1881 –July 19 1882 succession box
title = United States Minister Resident, Bolivia
before = Charles Adams
after =Richard Gibbs (diplomat)
years =November 4 ,1882 –June 1 1883 succession box
title = United States Minister Resident, Paraguay
before =John E. Bacon
after =Granville Stuart
years =May 19 ,1890 –June 30 1894
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