Charles Russell Lowell

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Charles Russell Lowell, Jr. (2 January 183520 October 1864) was a railroad executive, foundryman, and general in the Union Army during the American Civil War. He was mortally wounded at the Battle of Cedar Creek and was mourned by a number of leading generals.

Lowell was born in Boston, Massachusetts. His mother, Anna Cabot Jackson Lowell (1819 – 1874), a daughter of Patrick Tracy Jackson, married Charles Russell Lowell, Sr., a brother of James Russell Lowell. She wrote verse and books on education. Lowell graduated as the valedictorian from Harvard University in 1854, and worked in an iron mill in Trenton, New Jersey, for a few months in 1855. He spent two years abroad, and from 1858 to 1860 was local treasurer of the Burlington and Missouri River Railroad. In 1860, he took charge of the Mount Savage Iron Works in Cumberland, Maryland.

Lowell entered the Union army in June 1861, and was commissioned as a captain in the 3rd (afterwards 6th) U.S. Cavalry. On 15 April 1863, he became Colonel of the 2nd Massachusetts Cavalry. He was fatally wounded in the Battle of Cedar Creek on 19 October 1864, when he was promoted brigadier general of U.S. Volunteers, and died on the next day at Middletown, Virginia, at the age of 29. Upon hearing of his death, Brig. Gen. George Armstrong Custer wept and Maj. Gen. Philip Sheridan remarked "I do not think there was a quality which I could have added to Lowell. He was the perfection of a man and a soldier."

In October 1863, Lowell married Josephine Shaw (18431905), a sister of Colonel Robert Gould Shaw, one of his close friends. Her home when she was married was on Staten Island, and she became deeply interested in the social problems of New York City. She was a member of the State Charities Aid Society, and from 1867 to 1889 was a member of the New York State Board of Charities, being the first woman appointed to that board. She founded the Charity Organization Society of New York City in 1882, and wrote Public Relief and Private Charity (1884) and Industrial Arbitration and Conciliation (1893).

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  • Carol Bundy speaks with ThoughtCast about her biography of Lowell, who was also her great-great-great uncle!