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General James
Longstreet, CSA January
8, 1821 – January 2, 1904
James Longstreet
was born January 8, 1821 in Edgefield
District, South Carolina, the son of
planter James and Mary Ann Dent
Longstreet. Longstreet spent his early
years in Augusta Georgia. On the death
of his father, he went with his mother
to Somerville, Alabama where he lived
with his uncle.
Longstreet entered West Point from
Alabama, graduated in 1842, fifty-fourth
in a class of sixty-two. He was assigned
to various military posts in Missouri
and Louisiana until the outbreak of the
War with Mexico in 1848. He served under
General Zachary Taylor and saw combat at
Monterry, Palo Atlo, Resaca and was
wounded at Chapultepec.
Major Longstreet felt his loyalty
belonged to his native state when the
War between the States began. He
resigned from the U.S. Army on June 1,
1861 and offered his services to the new
Confederacy. |
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Two weeks
after his resignation, the former army
major was a new brigadier general in
command of a brigade of Virginia and
North Carolina troops which he led at
The Battle of First Manassas, also
called The Battle of Bull Run. A
promotion soon followed and Major
General Longstreet was assigned to
command a division and then a wing of
the Confederate army in Virginia. When
General Robert E. Lee took command of
the army that he renamed the Army of
Northern Virginia, General Longstreet
was in command of a corps, which he led
through the Seven Days Campaign. General
Longstreet, or “Old Pete” as he was
nicknamed, proved to be an efficient
soldier with a keen eye for battlefield
tactics. He learned from his experiences
on the battlefield and stubbornly
applied his trade in every battle to
come. General Lee fondly called him, “my
old war horse.” |
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In
the summer of 1862, Lee moved
his army northward toward an
encounter with Union troops near
Manassas, Virginia. The Second
Battle of Bull Run was fought
near the same area where
Confederate forces had driven
the Union troops from the field
a year before. This two-day
struggle pitted the bulk of the
Union forces under General John
Pope against the corps of
General "Stonewall" Jackson. At
the height of the battle,
Longstreet moved his corps next
to Jackson's position and
charged in a vicious
counterattack that first turned
the Union flank and then swept
General Pope's hapless Union
soldiers from the field. The
brilliant victory gave Lee the
chance to invade Maryland and
hopefully cause the people in
that state to flock to the
Confederate cause. Longstreet's
troops crossed the Potomac and
marched toward Frederick while
the Union Army, back under the
full command of George
McClellan, finally reached
Maryland and drove directly
toward Lee's then scattered
forces. Longstreet's men fought
the Battle of South Mountain and
again at the Battle of Antietam,
where the general was
conspicuous on the field.
Longstreet credited his troops
with holding the thin southern
line against the final Union
attacks despite being
outnumbered and out gunned by
Union artillery. His corps was
allowed to rest and reorganize
briefly before they marched
toward Fredericksburg, Virginia
in response to the next Union
threat. It was the Battle of
Fredericksburg on December 13,
1862 where General Longstreet
excelled in his use of a
defensive position. His troops
held high ground west of the
city and easily repulsed
repeated Union charges.
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By
1863, Longstreet had been
promoted to lieutenant general
and was one of Lee's most
trusted generals. Though he
missed the Battle of
Chancellorsville because of
military events in southeast
Virginia, Longstreet returned to
the army in time for the
Gettysburg Campaign. With the
death of "Stonewall" Jackson
after Chancellorsville, General
Lee had divided his army into
three corps and relied heavily
on Longstreet's opinions.
The general performed well until
the battle of Gettysburg began
and critics later accused the
general of losing the battle by
questioning orders and stubborn
delays in beginning attacks Lee
ordered. He opposed attacking at
Gettysburg in favor of
maneuvering Meade out of his
position. Longstreet, who had
come to believe in the strategic
offense and the tactical
defense, was proven right when
the Confederate attacks on the
second and third days were
repulsed. He proved to be as
stubborn with his fellow
officers as he was with the
enemy and paid little attention
to the criticisms until after
the close of the Civil War, when
he steadfastly defended his
opinion that flaws in leadership
during the campaign had to be
shared with other officers,
including the untouchable Lee.
This opinion would make General
Longstreet controversial until
the end of his life.
That September, General
Longstreet was ordered to take
his corps to Georgia to assist
the Confederate army there under
Braxton Bragg. He arrived too
late to participate in the first
day of the battle as the armies,
often hand-to-hand, fought
desperately all day. The next
day, September 20, Bragg again
tried to drive between the Union
force and Chattanooga, but
failed to dislodge Rosecrans’
line. Then, a gap opened in the
Federal ranks, and General
Longstreet’s Confederates
smashed through the hole,
routing Rosecrans and half his
army. General George H. Thomas
took command of the remaining
Federals and formed a new battle
line on Snodgrass Hill. His men
held their ground against
repeated assaults, earning
Thomas the nickname “Rock of
Chickamauga.” After dark, Thomas
withdrew his men from the field
and retread back to Chattanooga.
Bragg did not continue the
attack on the Federal army, but
against the advise of Longstreet
and Bragg’s command staff, he
ordered a siege of Chattanooga.
In the dispute over the
follow-up of the victory,
Longstreet was critical of Bragg
and was soon detached to
Knoxville to drive General
Burnside from the city and back
into Kentucky.
Arriving at Knoxville, General
Longstreet ordered a siege of
the city, as fate would have it,
the action he opposed at
Chattanooga. The plan failed at
Knoxville as it did at
Chickamauga. General Grant sent
reinforcements to both cities,
which resulted in Confederate
defeats at both cities. Learning
that Federal reinforcements were
in route to Knoxville,
Longstreet ordered an attack on
Fort Sanders on November 29,
resulting in a Confederate
defeat.
Longstreet abandoned the Siege
of Knoxville on December 4, and
retreated to rejoin General
Robert E. Lee and the Army of
Northern Virginia. The Federal
army pursued, but not too
closely. December 14, General
Longstreet was at Rogersville,
some 60 miles from Knoxville.
The Federal army was at Bean
Station. Longstreet turned his
army around and they clashed at
Bean Station. By nightfall, the
Federals were retiring from Bean
Station back toward Knoxville
and the battle ended. The
weather turned severe, record
low temperatures and snow and
the Confederate army was unable
to travel and went into winter
camp at Russellville. During the
winter, the armies fought in the
Battle of Mossy Creek (present
Jefferson City), Dandridge and
Fair Garden.
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General Longstreet’s 1863 winter
headquarters was in the Nenney
family home in Russellville,
just outside Morristown,
Tennessee.
Friends of General Longstreet
Headquarters Museum are
renovating the historic home and
developing it into a Civil War
museum and interpretative
center. Photographs and
information of the Longstreet
Headquarters, and description of
the Battles of Fort Sanders,
Bean Station, Mossy Creek and
Fair Garden are included on this
website.
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Longstreet’s corps did not
return to Virginia until the
following May, when Longstreet
led them into another battle in
an area west of Fredericksburg
called the Wilderness. The
general was seriously wounded in
that battle and the injury kept
him away from the army until
April 1865. He rejoined the Army
of Northern Virginia just in
time to witness the abandonment
of Richmond and retreat to
Appomattox Court House.
Longstreet's command held part
of the final Confederate line at
Appomattox until a flag of truce
stopped the fighting. General
Longstreet surrendered and was
paroled with his troops.
General James Longstreet made
three mistakes that have denied him his
deserved place in Southern Posterity.
1. He argued with General Robert E. Lee at Gettysburg
2. He was right
3. He became a Republican.
After
the war, Longstreet moved to New
Orleans where he became
president of an insurance
company and owned a cotton
business. He then surprised many
of his friends when he joined
the Republican Party; a choice
that horrified many southerners
who were ardent democrats saw
the Republicans as the political
party responsible for the war
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reconstruction. Some went so far
as to brand him a traitor to the
southern cause. Despite the
slander and accusations,
Longstreet actively participated
in southern reunions and became
friends with many former enemies
including General U.S. Grant
whose wife, Julia Dent, was a
cousin. In 1880, then
ex-President Grant used his
influence to have Longstreet
appointed as U.S. minister to
Turkey. Longstreet moved to
Gainesville, Georgia and became
US Marshall for the District of
Georgia and later a commissioner
for the Pacific Railroad under
Presidents McKinley and
Roosevelt from 1897 to 1904. In
his spare time, he wrote
articles for popular magazines
and eventually published his
highly regarded memoirs, From
Manassas to Appomattox in 1896.
He outlived most of his
high-ranking postwar detractors.
He died at Gainesville, Georgia
on January 2, 1094, the last of
the high command of the
Confederacy. He is buried in
Gainesville.
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