Ulysses Simpson Grant.
When a man is energetic and determines to be somebody in the world—which is
praiseworthy so long as that energy is guided by propriety and a just conception
of right, there are always scores, hundreds, perhaps thousands of people who
endeavor to depreciate that man's reward.[298]
No other excuse can be assigned for the slander and vituperation which has
from time to time been heaped upon the fair reputation of General U. S. Grant.
Born in obscurity at Point Pleasant, Ohio, April 27th, 1822, his life is a
fitting type of the possibilities of our glorious institutions. Through the
influence of Hon. Thomas L. Hamer he was admitted at West Point in 1839.
Personally, at this early age, he detested war and was opposed to accepting the
opportunity, but his father persuaded him to go, and his name was blunderingly
registered as U. S., instead of H. U., hence he was ever after known as U. S.
Grant.
In 1843 he graduated, ranking twenty-first in a class of thirty-nine. It will
be remembered that Lee and McClellan each ranked second when they graduated. At
this time Grant was not taken with war, and probably evinced little interest in
army tactics. The Mexican war came on and Grant here distinguished himself,
rising to the rank of captain. After the war he was stationed at Detroit, and
Sacketts Harbor, but this kind of inactivity was ill-suited to the restless
nature of Grant; he therefore resigned.
Having married a Miss Dent, of St. Louis, he accordingly moved onto a farm
near that city. The next few years he was engaged on the farm, in a real estate
office in St. Louis, and at the outbreak of the civil war was in business with
his father, dealing in leather. When the news of the fall of Fort Sumter reached
Galena he immediately raised a company and marched to Springfield where they
tendered their services to the governor. Grant acted as mustering officer until,
being commissioned colonel of the Twenty-first Illinois Volunteers, he took the
field. His first great victory was the capture[299] of Fort Donelson with 15,000 prisoners. When
asked by the Confederate general what terms of surrender was expected his answer
was, "No terms other than an unconditional and immediate surrender can be
accepted. I propose to move upon your works at once." The fall of Fort Donelson
and the capture of its garrison being the first substantial victory that had
crowned the Union cause, together with the above described answer to General
Buckner, brought the name of General Grant prominently before the country.
Pittsburgh Landing followed and then Grant determined to take Vicksburg. All
his generals declared the plan he proposed unmilitary and impossible, but after
several unsuccessful attempts the Gibraltar of the Mississippi was captured, and
this time 27,000 prisoners taken. Now came the battle of Chattanooga. General
Halleck in speaking of this battle said:
"Considering the strength of the rebel position, and the difficulty of
storming his entrenchments, the battle of Chattanooga must be considered the
most remarkable in history. Indeed it is so. After Grant had turned the
Confederate right flank, Sherman was intercepted between Longstreet and Bragg,
thus cutting Longstreet entirely out, and preventing another junction being
possible. Resolutions of thanks were passed in Ohio and New York, and Congress
created Grant a Lieutenant-General, a commission which had been held by no one
since General Scott resigned. Indeed, if ever a General deserved honor, Grant
had won it; he had opened the Mississippi to navigation, and had captured nearly
100,000 prisoners and arms."
He was now commander of all the Federal forces. He at once inaugurated two
campaigns to be carried on[300] at once. One under Sherman, against Atlanta
commanded by the skillful rebel General Johnson; the other under Meade, directed
against Lee and the Confederate capitol. Sherman advanced upon Atlanta, and the
success of his famous march to the sea is well-known.
The capture of Lee was a far more difficult undertaking. After various
flanking movements and costly assaults, the problem of taking Lee narrowed
itself down to a siege of Petersburg. Grant perceived that his only hope lie in
literally starving the Confederate army out by cutting off all resources as far
as practicable. Lee attempted to draw off attention toward Washington, but
General Sheridan drove Early out of the Shenandoah Valley, devastating the
country to such an extent that it was impossible to forage an army there should
Lee attempt such a maneuver again. Time wore away, and on the 9th of April,
1865, Grant captured the Confederate army under Lee, thus virtually ending the
war.
On July 25, 1866, he was made general of the United States army; the rank
having been created for him, he was the first to hold it. At the next Republican
Convention, Grant was nominated for President on the first ballot, and was
elected over Seymour, and was re-elected a second term by an increased
majority.
When his public services were finished he started in company with his wife,
son Jesse, and a few friends. They set sail from Philadelphia on the 17th of
May, 1877. They visited nearly all the countries of Europe, and part of those of
Africa and Asia. On this trip the Grant party were the guests of nearly all the
crowned heads of those foreign countries, everywhere receiving the most exalted
honors it has ever been the pleasure of an American to enjoy, and on his return
to the United[301] States they were the recipients of an ovation in
many of the principal cities of this country.
His success seems to have been the outgrowth of hard study and ability to
perform the most exhaustive labor without fatigue. The scenes of his later days
were clouded with the intrigues of a stock gambler, but the stain that the
Grant-Ward failure seemed likely to throw on the spotless reputation of General
Grant was wiped away when the facts were brought to light, and a new lustre was
added to his fame by the self-sacrifice shown in the final settlement.
General Grant proved to be a writer of no low order, and his autobiography is
a very readable book. On July 23rd, 1885, the General surrendered to a loathsome
cancer, and the testimonials of devotion shown the honored dead; and the
bereaved family throughout the civilized world, indicated the stronghold upon
the hearts of the people held by the dead General.