Alfred Mouton
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Alfred Mouton | |
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February 10, 1829 – April 8, 1864 | |
Place of birth | Opelousas, Louisiana |
Place of death | Mansfield, Louisiana |
Allegiance | Confederate Army |
Rank | Brigadier General |
Battles/wars | American Civil War: * Battle of Shiloh * Red River Campaign * Battle of Mansfield |
Jean Jacques Alfred Alexandre Mouton ("Alfred") (February 10, 1829 – April 8, 1864) was a Confederate general in the American Civil War. A graduate of the United States Military Academy, he was killed at the Battle of Mansfield.
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[edit] Life
Alfred Mouton was born in Opelousas, Louisiana, the son of former Louisiana governor Alexandre Mouton. Due to the elder Mouton wanting his children to receive the best education possible, he enrolled Alfred into St. Charles College in Grant Coteau, Louisiana. Upon his graduation from St. Charles College, Alexandre Mouton secured for Alfred an appointment to the United States Military Academy in West Point, New York. Alfred was hesitant to go at first because up until that point in his life he had been only around French speaking people and custom and was not accustomed to speaking English (he could speak little). However, his father was adamant so he was enrolled in the class of 1846.
At West Point, Mouton was an average student scoring good marks in certain areas, including French, but it was evident that he struggled with the new language he was around. Alfred graduated from West Point on July 1, 1850, 38th out of 44. He stayed with the U.S. Army just briefly before resigning his commission that September. As soon as he resigned his commission Mouton took up a civil engineering position as an assistant engineer for the New Orleans, Opelousas, and Great Western Railroad. He held that position from 1852–53. After resigning from the railroad business, Mouton took up farming sugar cane in Lafayette Parish, Louisiana.
While living in Lafayette Parish, Mouton became a prominent member of the community due his family bloodlines. He was well thought of and lived up to his position in the community. He served as leader of the Lafayette Vigilante Committee, which formed to disperse justice to those who paid off juries or perjured witnesses. He also served as brigadier general in the Louisiana State Militia from 1850–61.
[edit] Civil War
At the outbreak of the Civil War, he organized a company of men from the local population in Lafayette Parish. The company consisted of mostly farmers from around the area. Mouton was elected Captain of the company upon its organization. When the company was organized into the 18th Louisiana Infantry, he was elected Colonel. Mouton quickly made a reputation for himself as a strict disciplinarian and an efficient drillmaster. However, after drill he mingled freely with his soldiers in camp stopping to talk to anyone of the regiment. One of his soldiers had this to say about him: "As a drillmaster, he had few, if any, equals. I have seen him drill the regiment for an hour in a square, the sides of which ware equal to the length of his line of battle, without once throwing a company outside or recalling a command when given. He was a strict disciplinarian and allowed no deviation from orders either by officers or soldiers."
During the weeks before the Battle of Shiloh, the 18th Louisiana was one of the regiments called to the tiny crossroads town of Corinth, Mississippi, for Confederate General Albert Sidney Johnston's planned attack on Union forces encamped near Pittsburg Landing, Tennessee.
During the Battle of Shiloh, the 18th Louisiana was organized into Col. Preston Pond's brigade. It was while serving in this brigade that the regiment and their commander received their baptism of fire. Pond's brigade attacked against the Federal right against the divisions of Union generals William Tecumseh Sherman and John McClernand. During one of these attacks, Colonel Mouton was wounded. After the Confederate defeat, General P.G.T. Beauregard ordered a withdrawal back to Corinth, Mississippi. After arriving in Corinth, the 18th Louisiana was sent back to Louisiana to replenish its depleted ranks.
While back in Louisiana, Mouton was made interim commander of West Louisiana and did what he could with the limited men and supplies that he had to thwart Federal attempts to move into the state. His army, attempting to protect the sugar cane farms along Bayou Lafourche was brushed aside by Union general Godfrey Weitzel at the Battle of Labadieville, which led to Weitzel destroying much of the crops in that area. With the arrival of Confederate General Richard Taylor, Mouton was made a brigade commander and given the rank of brigadier general. The duo of Mouton and Taylor would prove to be one of the most efficient during the war and they, along with cavalry commander Thomas Green, would harass, confuse, frustrate, and delay Union attempts to secure the Bayou Teche region of southern Louisiana.
Mouton's leadership in his Louisiana brigade helped the Confederates undermine Union attempts to access the rich Bayou Teche region. He was a key participant in the battles of Irish Bend, Fort Bisland, Franklin, and Bayou Borbeau, along with numerous other smaller skirmishes.
Mouton's brigade was used as the lead unit in the Confederate attack at the Battle of Mansfield. While leading his brigade in a charge against the Union position, Mouton was shot and killed. His loss was lamented by General Taylor when the latter said "above all the death of the gallant Mouton affected me... modest, unselfish, and patriotic. He showed best in action always leading his men." He was first buried on the battlefield but was moved in 1874 to St. John's Cemetery in Lafayette, Louisiana.
Mouton's stepmother was the sister of Confederate General Franklin Gardner.
[edit] References
- Ayres, Thomas., Dark and Bloody Ground : The Battle of Mansfield and the Forgotten Civil War in Louisiana, Cooper Square Press, 2001.
- Parrish, T. Michael, Richard Taylor, Soldier Prince of Dixie, University of North Carolina Press, 1992.
- Taylor, Richard, Destruction and Reconstruction : Personal experiences of the late war, Time-Life Books, 1983.
- Warner, Ezra J., Generals in Gray: Lives of the Confederate Commanders, Louisiana State University Press, 1959, ISBN 0-8071-0823-5.