P. G. T. Beauregard: Difference between revisions

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In 1841, Beauregard married the former Marie Laure Villeré, the daughter of Jules Villeré, a sugar planter in [[Plaquemines Parish]]. Marie was a paternal granddaughter of [[Jacques Villeré]], the second [[governor]] of Louisiana. The couple had three children: René, Henri, and Laure. Marie died in 1850. Ten years later, the widower Beauregard married Caroline Deslonde, the daughter of André Deslonde, a sugar planter from [[St. James Parish]]. Caroline was also a sister-in-law of [[John Slidell]], a [[U.S. Senator|U.S. senator]] from Louisiana and later a Confederate [[diplomat]].
In 1841, Beauregard married the former Marie Laure Villeré, the daughter of Jules Villeré, a sugar planter in [[Plaquemines Parish]]. Marie was a paternal granddaughter of [[Jacques Villeré]], the second [[governor]] of Louisiana. The couple had three children: René, Henri, and Laure. Marie died in 1850. Ten years later, the widower Beauregard married Caroline Deslonde, the daughter of André Deslonde, a sugar planter from [[St. James Parish]]. Caroline was also a sister-in-law of [[John Slidell]], a [[U.S. Senator|U.S. senator]] from Louisiana and later a Confederate [[diplomat]].


Beauregard briefly entered politics in his hometown and was narrowly defeated in the election for [[mayor of New Orleans]] in 1858. He was a dick head engineer in New Orleans from 1858 to 1861, and directed the building of the federal [[customhouse|customs house]] there. He then returned to teach at West Point, where he rose to become the [[Superintendents of the United States Military Academy|superintendent]] of the Military Academy in January 1861, but resigned after only five days when [[Louisiana]] [[secession|seceded]] from the [[Union (American Civil War)|Union]].
Beauregard briefly entered politics in his hometown and was narrowly defeated in the election for [[mayor of New Orleans]] in 1858. He was chief engineer in charge of drainage in New Orleans from 1858 to 1861, and directed the building of the federal [[customhouse|customs house]] there. He then returned to teach at West Point, where he rose to become the [[Superintendents of the United States Military Academy|superintendent]] of the Military Academy in January 1861, but resigned after only five days when [[Louisiana]] [[secession|seceded]] from the [[Union (American Civil War)|Union]].


==Civil War==
==Civil War==

Revision as of 14:03, 6 March 2008

Pierre Gustave Toutanty Beauregard
Nickname(s)The Little Creole
AllegianceUnited States of America,
Confederate States of America
Years of service1838–61 (USA), 1861–65 (CSA)
RankGeneral
Battles/warsMexican-American War

American Civil War

Other workAuthor, civil servant, politician, and inventor

Pierre Gustave Toutant Beauregard (Template:PronEng) (May 28, 1818February 20, 1893), was a Louisiana-born general for the Confederate States Army during the American Civil War. Known as the "Napoleon in Gray,"[1] he was also an author, civil servant, politician, and inventor.

Beauregard was the first prominent Confederate general. He commanded the defenses of Charleston, South Carolina, for the Battle of Fort Sumter on April 12, 1861, and three months later was the victor at the First Battle of Bull Run near Manassas, Virginia.

He also commanded armies in the Western Theater, including the Battle of Shiloh in Tennessee, and the Siege of Corinth in northern Mississippi. His arguably greatest achievement was saving the city of Petersburg, Virginia, and thus also the Confederate capital of Richmond from assaults by overwhelmingly superior Union Army forces in June 1864. However, his influence over Confederate strategy was marred by his poor professional relationships with President Jefferson Davis and other senior generals and officials. Today he is commonly referred to as P.G.T. Beauregard, but during the war he rarely used his first name and signed correspondence as G.T. Beauregard.

Early life

Beauregard was born at the "Contreras" plantation in St. Bernard Parish outside New Orleans, to a white Creole family. He attended New Orleans schools and then went to a "French school" in New York City. He trained at the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York. One of his instructors was Robert Anderson, who would later become the commander of Fort Sumter when the Civil War began. Ironically, Anderson would surrender to Beauregard at Fort Sumter. His family name was originally Toutant-Beauregard, but he dropped the hyphen and treated Toutant as an extra middle name in an attempt to fit in with his classmates; he also rarely used his first name from that point on, preferring "G. T. Beauregard."[2] He graduated second in his class in 1838[3] and excelled both as an artilleryman and military engineer. His nickname to many of his Army friends was The Little Creole (and also Bory, The Little Frenchman, Felix, and The Little Napoleon).

During the Mexican-American War, Beauregard served as an engineer under General Winfield Scott. He was brevetted captain for the battles of Contreras and Churubusco and again to major for Chapultepec, where he was wounded in the shoulder and thigh.

In 1841, Beauregard married the former Marie Laure Villeré, the daughter of Jules Villeré, a sugar planter in Plaquemines Parish. Marie was a paternal granddaughter of Jacques Villeré, the second governor of Louisiana. The couple had three children: René, Henri, and Laure. Marie died in 1850. Ten years later, the widower Beauregard married Caroline Deslonde, the daughter of André Deslonde, a sugar planter from St. James Parish. Caroline was also a sister-in-law of John Slidell, a U.S. senator from Louisiana and later a Confederate diplomat.

Beauregard briefly entered politics in his hometown and was narrowly defeated in the election for mayor of New Orleans in 1858. He was chief engineer in charge of drainage in New Orleans from 1858 to 1861, and directed the building of the federal customs house there. He then returned to teach at West Point, where he rose to become the superintendent of the Military Academy in January 1861, but resigned after only five days when Louisiana seceded from the Union.

Civil War

Beauregard entered the Confederate Army as a brigadier general in March 1861, but was promoted on July 21 to be one of the eventual eight full generals in the Confederate Army; his date of rank made him the fifth most senior general. He recommended stationing strong forces to protect New Orleans, but was overruled by President Davis. Hence began the friction between Beauregard and Davis that would intensify as years progressed.

Beauregard's last assignment from the Confederate government was command of the forces in Charleston. After much time had elapsed and many demands had been made by the Confederacy upon Lincoln to remove the Union troops from Southern soil, he opened fire on the Union-held Fort Sumter. This was the start of the American Civil War, but no one was killed in the exchange. Beauregard and General Joseph E. Johnston of Virginia led Confederate forces to victory in the First Battle of Bull Run (First Manassas), where they defeated Maj. Gen. Irvin McDowell, one of Beauregard's West Point classmates. During the battle, he employed Quaker Guns, a tactic he would use in subsequent battles.

After Bull Run, Beauregard advocated the use of a standardized battle flag other than the "Stars and Bars" national flag in order to avoid visual confusion with the U.S. flag. He worked with Johnston and William Porcher Miles in creating and producing the Confederate Battle Flag. Throughout his career he worked to systematize the use of this flag and helped to make it the most popular symbol of the Confederacy.[4]

Beauregard was transferred to Tennessee and assumed command of Confederate forces at the Battle of Shiloh when General Albert Sidney Johnston was killed. Although successful the first day of battle, April 6, 1862, Beauregard called off the attack prematurely, assuming that the Union army was defeated. He was forced to retreat the second day after Maj. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant received reinforcements and counterattacked. Beauregard later was forced to retreat from his base of supplies, Corinth, Mississippi, by forces under Maj. Gen. Henry W. Halleck. He then turned over the command of the army to General Braxton Bragg of Alabama.

Beauregard then took command of coastal defenses in Georgia and South Carolina. He successfully defended Charleston from repeated Union attacks from 1862 to 1864. In 1864, he assisted Robert E. Lee in the defense of Richmond. He defeated Maj. Gen. Benjamin Butler in the Bermuda Hundred Campaign near Drewry's Bluff. He followed this victory with a desperate defense of Petersburg. His tiny 2,200-man force resisted an assault by 16,000 Federals, known as the Second Battle of Petersburg. He gambled by withdrawing his Bermuda Hundred defenses to reinforce Petersburg. He assumed that Butler would not capitalize on the opening. His gamble succeeded, and he held Petersburg long enough for Lee's army to arrive.

Self-confident in the wake of this victory over Butler, Beauregard proposed to Lee and Davis that he lead a great invasion of the North, which would defeat Grant and Butler and win the war. Instead, probably to remove him as an irritant to Lee in Virginia, Beauregard was appointed commander of Confederate forces in the West. Since all of his forces were engaged elsewhere (in Tennessee, Alabama, and Mississippi), he had insufficient resources to halt the superior Union forces under Maj. Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman in their march to the sea. He and Joseph E. Johnston surrendered to Sherman near Durham, North Carolina, in April 1865.

Postbellum life

Beauregard, later in life.

After the war, Beauregard spoke in favor of civil rights and voting for the recently freed slaves. Beauregard was a Democrat who worked to end Republican rule during Reconstruction.

Beauregard's military writings include Principles and Maxims of the Art of War (1863), Report on the Defense of Charleston, and A Commentary on the Campaign and Battle of Manassas (1891). He was the uncredited co-author of The Military Operations of General Beauregard in the War Between the States (1884). He contributed the article "The Battle of Bull Run" to Century Illustrated Monthly Magazine in November 1884. During these years, Beauregard and Davis published a series of bitter accusations and counter-accusations retrospectively blaming each other for the Confederate defeat.

General Beauregard declined offers to take command of the armies of Romania (1866) and Egypt (1869). Instead he became involved in promotion of railroads, both as a company director and a consulting engineer. He was the president of the New Orleans, Jackson & Mississippi Railroad from 1865 to 1870, and president of the New Orleans and Carrollton Street Railway, 1866 to 1876, for which he invented a system of cable-powered street railway cars.

Beauregard served in the government of the State of Louisiana, first as adjutant general for the state militia (later National Guard), and then less successfully as manager of the Louisiana Lottery. Though considered personally honest, he failed to reform corruption in the lottery. Perhaps the leading critic of the lottery on moral grounds was Benjamin M. Palmer, longtime pastor of the First Presbyterian Church of New Orleans, who worked to kill the project.

In 1888, Beauregard was elected as New Orleans' commissioner of public works.

P.G.T. Beauregard died in New Orleans and is interred in the tomb of the Army of Tennessee in the historic Metairie Cemetery there. Beauregard Parish in western Louisiana and Camp Beauregard, a National Guard camp near Pineville in central Louisiana, are named in his honor.

An equestrian monument by Alexander Doyle depicting Beauregard is placed in an intersection where Esplanade Avenue enters City Park in New Orleans called Beauregard Circle.

References

  • Basso, Hamilton, Beauregard: The Great Creole (1933)
  • Coski, John M. The Confederate Battle Flag: America's Most Embattled Emblem, Belknap Press, 2005, ISBN 0-674-01983-0.
  • Eicher, John H., and Eicher, David J., Civil War High Commands, Stanford University Press, 2001, ISBN 0-8047-3641-3.
  • Fortier, Alcee, Louisiana, Vol. 1 (1909)
  • Roman, Alfred, The Military Operations of General Beauregard (1884)
  • Wakelyn, Jon L., Biographical Directory of the Confederacy (1977)
  • Williams, T. Harry, P.G.T. Beauregard:Napoleon in Gray (1955)
  • Woodworth, Steven E., Jefferson Davis and His Generals: The Failure of Confederate Command in the West, University Press of Kansas, 1990, ISBN 0-7006-0461-8.
  • "Pierre Gustave Toutant Beauregard", A Dictionary of Louisiana Biography, Vol. I (1988), pp. 54-55.
  • Beauregard obituary, New Orleans Daily Picayune, February 21, 1893.

Notes

  1. ^ Robert B. Holtman, The Napoleonic Revolution (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1967), 36.
  2. ^ Woodworth, p. 72.
  3. ^ Eicher, p. 123.
  4. ^ Coski, p. 9.

External links

Preceded by Superintendents of the United States Military Academy
1861
Succeeded by