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August 20, 2018
10080. Portraits, Generals and Commanders, by Rebecca Blackwell Drake, excerpts from In Their Own Words: Soldiers Tell the Story of the Battle of Raymond
—Portraits—
Generals and Commanders
by Rebecca Blackwell Drake
Excepts from In Their Own Words: Soldiers Tell the Story of the Battle of Raymond
Major General James B. McPherson
Commander 17th Corps
Major General James Birdseye McPherson was a man who defied some o
life's greatest odds. Born in 1828, near Clyde, Ohio, he was the son of a
mentally unstable blacksmith who was later declared incompetent. In order
to help make ends meet, young McPherson took a job in a local store.
While working, he was taken under the wings of the store owner who
recognized young McPherson's mental aptitude. With his guidance,
McPherson won an appointment to enter the United States Military
Academy at West Point.
McPherson had come a long way from a meager childhood to the nation's
most prestigious military academy. As a testament to his tenacity, he
managed to graduate first out of fifty-two students in his class. By the age
of twenty-four, as McPherson left the military academy, he had changed
what would have been a humble destiny. In 1862, ten years after
graduating from West Point, he was chosen by U.S. Grant as his Chief
Military Engineer. The position eventually led him to the battlefield at
Corinth, Mississippi, where he commanded an infantry brigade. His next
appointment would be to lead the Union's 17th Corps during the campaign
to capture Vicksburg.
May 12, 1863, found the thirty-five-year-old general leading a corps of
12,000 men as they marched toward the outskirts of Raymond.
McPherson's participation in the Battle of Raymond represented a first for
him. It was his first time to be the commanding officer in charge of a
military campaign. Displayed on the shoulder of his uniform were his
general stars that had been sewn into place by Mrs. U. S. Grant. The
Battle of Raymond proved to be one of the most challenging battles for
McPherson during his career with the Union Army. After a rugged start, he
1828-1864
finally pulled out the victory. Military historians agree that the Battle of Raymond was won not by military strategy but due to
the overwhelming size of the Union Army.
During the Vicksburg Campaign, McPherson requested a leave of absence from his military post in order to marry his fiancée,
Emily Hoffman. Sherman denied the request. Obviously, the Union Army felt McPherson was too valuable to lose, even for a
short time.
After Vicksburg, the illustrious career of the young military genius was short-lived. One year later, on July 22, 1864,
McPherson, at the age of thirty-six, was killed during the Atlanta Campaign as he rode into enemy skirmishers, under the
command of General John Bell Hood, a former classmate of McPherson at West Point.. As he attempted retreat back toward
his command, the enemy yelled, "Surrender!" When McPherson attempted to flee, he was killed. The next day, Maj. General
Oliver Howard, wrote in his report, 'We were all made sad yesterday by the death of General McPherson - so young, so
noble, so promising, already commanding a department! His death occasioned a profound sense of loss, a feeling that his
place can never be completely filled. How valuable, how precious the country to us all, who have paid for its preservation
such a price. "
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