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James Longstreet, Confederate General, Gettysburg, Chickamauga

        Born:January 8, 1821, Edgefield District, South Carolina

      Died: Gainesville, Ga. January 2, 1904

      Confederate General

             by Brian Hampton

 
     
An elderly man sat in his parlor, his eyesight too poor to read the

      newspaper, listening to his son voice the words written by Reverend

      William Pendleton, Robert E. Lee's head of artillery during the Civil War.

      The prose was harsh, some would say vicious, as it repeated the charges

      he, Jubal Early, John Gordon, and others leveled against General

      Longstreet, accusing him of being insubordinate to the beloved Robert E.

      Lee and a traitor to the Southern people. "Liars! Liars!" he shouted out,

      and then, "the light of battle passing once more into his eyes," he stood

      and defended the General against these outrageous accusations, speaking to

      no one in particular except his son, who had heard these words before.

      Even in death, it seemed, Longstreet knew no rest from the controversies

      that surrounded his tenure as a soldier.

      J.C. Gaither, the man's son, stopped him in mid-sentence and asked that he

      be allowed to read another article, this one written by Helen Dortch

      Longstreet, the General's widow. In her rebuttal to Reverend Pendleton,

      Helen alluded to her recently published book in which she attempted to

      restore the reputation of the man who would come to be known in modern

      times as Lee's Tarnished Lieutenant. Hearing the benevolence of

      Longstreet's young widow, the elder Gaither calmed, sat down, and began to

      cry.

      James Longstreet was born in the Edgefield District of South Carolina on

      January 8, 1821 during a visit by his mother with her mother-in-law.

      Within weeks, young James was back at home on his parent's cotton

      plantation in the region of northern Georgia where Gainesville now stands

      and where his father, also named James, nicknamed him "Pete" for its

      meaning of "sturdy and trustworthy," a name into which Longstreet

      certainly grew.

      Longstreet owed his birth to South Carolina, his appointment to West Point

      in 1838 to the state of Alabama, and much of his income to Louisiana and

      the Federal Government, but he always thought of Georgia as home. He was

      educated at Westover near Augusta and received another kind of valuable

      education in the rugged Georgia woods that would serve him well as a

      soldier. He spent his formative years, and eventually died there. Still

      the perception among many Southerners in the latter years of Longstreet's

      life was that he had no home, no state which to call his own. In an age

      where one's state citizenship was a measure of one's worth as a human,

      this fact, after the war, added further ammunition to his critics'

charges.

 

      James Longstreet first offered his services to the Confederacy through the

      state of Alabama after resigning his commission as a Major in the United

      States army. He expected nothing more prestigious that a job as paymaster,

      his last appointment in the Federal army, but to his surprise he received

      a colonel's commission commanding infantry. By 1st Manassas (Bull Run) he

      had already been promoted to brigadier-general in command of three

      Virginia infantry regiments (1st, 11th, and 17th) which covered

      Blackburn's Ford during that battle. With an odd bit of irony, General

      Longstreet was supported by the brigade under Colonel Jubal Early who

      wrote in his official report of the action at the ford that Longstreet

      "was actively engaged in the thickest of the fire in directing and

      encouraging the men under his command, and I am satisfied he contributed

      very largely to the repulse of the enemy by his own personal exertions."

      This was likely the first and last compliment Early ever directed at

      Longstreet, and one might be pardoned for musing as to whether or not

      Early even remembered making this comment in the years after the war as he

      mounted a premeditated smear campaign against General Longstreet.

            Be sure to see the links to other Longstreet sites and pages at the

            end of this biography

      After the Confederate victory at Manassas, Longstreet continued to rise in

      rank and stature in the Confederate command structure. He formed close

      associations with P.G.T Beauregard and Joseph Johnston, the latter

      desiring Longstreet to be given the distinction of second in command. This

      appointment was not securable, however, due to several generals ranking

      Longstreet and Johnston's own squabbles with the Richmond government. By

      the time McClellan invaded the Virginia Peninsula, Longstreet was a

      Major-General, and he performed an important and well executed rear guard

      action at Williamsburg during Johnston's retreat towards Richmond.

      From that point onward, with the single exception of Seven Pines,

      Longstreet gave exemplary service to the Confederate army. When Robert E.

      Lee took command and formed the Army of Northern Virginia, Longstreet

      found in him both a friend and a valuable guide through his career as a

      soldier. With Lee's unqualified recommendation, he rose in rank to the

      senior lieutenant-general in the Confederate army and was given command of

      the 1st Corps of the Army of Northern Virginia, the premier subordinate of

      the premier army of the Confederacy. All across Virginia, into Maryland

      and Pennsylvania, Longstreet led his soldiers into battle after battle and

      received the love and affection of his men and the appreciation of his

      fellow generals. During the Seven Days and 2nd Manassas campaigns,

      Longstreet displayed his brilliance on the offensive, and at Sharpsburg

      and Fredericksburg, he showed he was equal to the tasks of the defensive

      as well. He was known as the bulldog, the staff in Lee's right hand, and

      the Old War-Horse, and as the war progressed, he would live up to each of

      these titles. But, Longstreet could hear the guns of war echoing all

      across the Confederacy, not just in Virginia, and as 1863 opened, he found

      himself seeding the controversy that followed him for the rest of his

      life. He disagreed with Robert E. Lee.

 

      Prior to the campaign that resulted in the battle of Gettysburg,

      Longstreet offered a plan to Lee and the Richmond government designed to

      relieve pressure on the important Mississippi River port of Vicksburg,

      then under attack from the forces under U.S. Grant. The loss of this port

      would have the disastrous effect of closing the Confederacy's overland

      link to the states of Arkansas, Texas, and most of Louisiana, and sealing

      the Mississippi from use by the Confederacy. Additionally, Braxton Bragg

      and his Army of Tennessee was being pushed back towards the important rail

      center of Chattanooga, a loss which would further strangle the already

      suffering Confederacy. "Old Pete" knew that this possibility had to be

      countered as well.

 

      Longstreet's plan was not adopted that June. The strategy employed was

      Lee's plan to invade the North, designed to relieve Virginia from the

      trampling feet of Federal soldiers, giving farmers time to bring in their

      badly needed crops. Lee also desired to threaten major Northern cities in

      the hopes of convincing the Union government that a continued war was

      useless. As indicated by a letter he sent to Richmond after the battle,

      Lee also hoped that the invasion of Northern soil would have the effect of

      relieving other parts of the Confederacy then under pressure from Grant

      and Rosecrans. While Longstreet had argued for direct relief, Lee seemed

      to believe that one of these armies would be compelled to move east and

      assist the Army of the Potomac if the Confederates were able to threaten

      major Northern cities.

      Lee's strategy depended on a grand victory, a literal destruction of the

      Army of the Potomac, and unfortunately for him, that highly sought after

      prize was not forthcoming. The Army of the Potomac moved faster than had

      been expected. Caught unaware with Stuart and his cavalry away from the

      main body of the army, Lee was forced to give battle in a location of

      which he had little knowledge and under circumstances which did not favor

      his desire to utilize an offensive strategy and employ defensive tactics.

      Longstreet was adamant throughout the entire battle that the plans being

      enacted were doomed to failure, and he was proven correct. The

      disagreements between Lee and Longstreet, then only a footnote to the

      campaign, provided fuel for the fiery attacks of Early, Pendleton, and

      fellow Georgian John Gordon after the war. Gettysburg was the spark that

      ignited the Lost Cause mythology that has dominated much of what we have

      learned

      In the aftermath of Gettysburg, that pivotal event in our nation's history.

      Army of Northern Virginia refitted and rested from its recent exertions, Longstreet again                raised his proposal

      for a western concentration, utilizing the Confederacy's only real

      advantage of interior lines. This time, Lee and Richmond officials

      endorsed his idea; however, by the time his plans were adopted,

      Longstreet's dire predictions of the fate of the Confederacy in the West

      had largely come true, leaving him an even larger task than he originally

      envisioned. Vicksburg had fallen, leaving Grant free to maneuver at will,

      and Bragg had been pushed even further back, south of Chattanooga and into

      northern Georgia. As Longstreet and two of his divisions began arriving to

      reinforce Bragg and the Army of Tennessee along the banks of Chickamauga

      Creek in north Georgia, Federal General Rosecrans was threatening to push

      past the Confederates and into the heart of Georgia, splitting the

      Confederacy into dangerously smaller sections.

 

 

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