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Bio
1807-1870), American soldier, general in the Confederate
States army, was the youngest son of major-general Henry Lee,
called " Light Horse Harry." He was born at Stratford, Westmoreland
county, Virginia, on the 19th of January 1807, and entered West Point
in 1825. Graduating four years later second in his class, he was given
a commission in the U.S. Engineer Corps. In 1831 he married Mary,
daughter of G. W. P. Custis, the adopted son of Washington and the
grandson of Mrs. Washington. In 1836 he became first lieutenant, and in
1838 captain. In this rank he took part in the Mexican War,
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Robert E. Lee
Later in Life
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repeatedly winning distinction for conduct and
bravery. He received the brevets of major for Cerro Gordo,
lieut.-colonel for Contreras-Churubusco and colonel for Chapultepec.
After the war he was employed in engineer work at Washington and
Baltimore, during which time, as before the war, he resided on the
great Arlington estate, near Washington, which had come to him through
his wife. In 1852 he was appointed superintendent of West Point, and
during his three years here he carried out many important changes in
the academy. Under him as cadets were his son G. W. Custis Lee, his
nephew, Fitzhugh Lee and J.
E. B. Stuart, all of whom became general officers in the Civil War.
In 1855 he was appointed as lieut.-colonel to the 2nd Cavalry,
commanded by Colonel Sidney
Johnston, with whom he served against the Indians of the Texas
border. In 1859, while at Arlington on leave, he was summoned to
command the United States troops sent to deal with the John Brown raid
on Harper's
Ferry. In March 1861
he was made colonel of the 1st U.S. Cavalry; but his career in the old
army ended with the secession of Virginia in the following month. Lee
was strongly averse to secession, but felt obliged to conform to the
action of his own state. The Federal authorities offered Lee the
command of the field army about to invade the South, which he refused.
Resigning his commission, he made his way to Richmond and was at once
made a major-general in the Virginian forces. A few weeks later he
became a brigadier-general (then the highest rank) in the Confederate
service.
The military operations with which the great Civil War
opened in 1861 were directed by President
Davis and General Lee. Lee was personally in charge of the
unsuccessful West Virginian operations in the autumn, and, having been
made a full general on the 31st of August, during the winter he devoted
his experience as an engineer to the fortification and general defense
of the Atlantic coast. Thence, when the well-drilled Army
of the Potomac was about to descend upon Richmond, he was hurriedly
recalled to Richmond. General
Johnston was wounded at the battle of Fair
Oaks (Seven Pines) on the 31st of May 1862, and General Robert E.
Lee was assigned to the command of the famous Army of Northern Virginia
which for the next three years " carried the rebellion on its
bayonets." Little can be said of Lee's career as a commander-in-chief
that is not an integral part of the history of the Civil War. His first
success was the " Seven Days' Battle " in which he stopped McClellan's
advance; this was quickly followed up by the crushing defeat of the
Federal army under Pope,
the invasion of Maryland and the sanguinary and indecisive battle
of the Antietam. The year ended with another great victory at Fredericksburg.
Chancellorsville,
won against odds of two to one, and the great three days' battle
of Gettysburg, where for the first time fortune turned decisively
against the Confederates, were the chief events of 1863. In the autumn
Lee fought a war of maneuver against General
Meade. The tremendous struggle of 1864 between Lee and Grant
included the battles of the Wilderness,
Spotsylvania,
North Anna, Cold
Harbor and the long siege
of Petersburg , in which, almost invariably, Lee was locally
successful. But the steady pressure of his unrelenting opponent slowly
wore down his strength. At last with not more than one man to oppose to
Grant's three he was compelled to break out of his Petersburg
lines (April 1865). A series of heavy combats revealed his purpose, and
Grant pursued the dwindling remnants of Lee's army to the westward.
Headed off by the Federal cavalry, and pressed closely in rear by
Grant's main body, General Lee had no alternative but to surrender. At Appomattox
Court House, on the 9th of April, the career of the Army of
Northern Virginia came to an end. Lee's
farewell order was issued on the following day, and within a few
weeks the Confederacy
was at an end. For a few months Lee lived quietly in Powhatan county,
making his formal submission to the Federal authorities and urging on
his own people acceptance of the new conditions. In August he was
offered, and accepted, the presidency of Washington College, Lexington
(now Washington and Lee University), a post which he occupied until his
death
on the 12th of October 1870 He was buried in the college grounds.
By his achievements he won a high place amongst the
great generals of history. - Though hampered by lack of materials and
by political necessities, his strategy was daring always, and he never
hesitated to take the gravest risks. On the field of battle he was as
energetic in attack as he was constant in defense, and his personal
influence over the men whom he led was extraordinary. No student of the
American Civil War can fail to notice how the influence of Lee
dominated the course of the struggle, and his surpassing ability was
never more conspicuously shown than in the last hopeless stages of the
contest. The personal history of Lee is lost in the history of the
great crisis of America's national life; friends and foes alike
acknowledged the purity of his motives, the virtues of his private
life, his earnest
Christianity and the unrepining loyalty with which he accepted the
ruin of his party.
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