Lysander Cutler

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General Lysander Cutler
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General Lysander Cutler

Lysander Cutler (February 16, 1807July 30, 1866) was a businessman, educator, politician, and a Union Army general during the American Civil War.

Contents

[edit] Early years

Cutler was born in Royalston, Massachusetts, the son of a farmer. Despite objections from his father, he desired a better education than the rudimentary courses he received in the local school, so he studied surveying and then began a career as a schoolmaster. Moving to Dexter, Maine, at the age of 21, he was forced to confront unruly pupils who had "flogged and ejected" the last several teachers who had attempted to discipline them. Cutler established his reputation by spending his first day in the "thorough flogging of every bully in the school."[1] Although he received some military experience fighting Indians in the Maine militia in the 1830s, the majority of his time before the Civil War was engaged in business pursuits. He started a woolen mill, a foundry, a flour mill, and a sawmill, becoming very wealthy in the process. He invested in various factories and in tenement housing. He was prominent in civic affairs as a selectmen, director of a railroad, trustee of Tufts College, and a state senator. His woolen mill, built in 1843, burned to the ground in 1853, causing him to lose his entire investment. The financial panic of 1856 and depression of 1857 ruined him and he decided to leave Maine and moved to Milwaukee, Wisconsin, to restart his career.

In Wisconsin, Cutler worked as a claims investigator for a mining company. He was required to make frequent trips into Indian territory, where he was often threatened with ambush and death. The mining company eventually failed, but a grain business that he founded in Milwaukee provided him with a living.

[edit] Civil War

In the first summer of the Civil War, Cutler, a respected 54-year-old businessman and Indian fighter, was commissioned colonel of the 6th Wisconsin Infantry on July 16, 1861. The regiment would eventually become one of the units of the famous Iron Brigade. During the fall and winter, he got off to a bad start as a commander, alienating his junior officers by insisting that they pass examinations on military topics, and removing them from command if he was displeased with the results. Many men of the regiment were of recent immigrant status and he sometimes enraged the enlisted men of the company by replacing their officers with men of different national backgrounds (and sometimes speaking different languages). Despite these problems, Cutler was elevated to temporary brigade command in the I Corps of the Army of the Potomac on March 13, 1862. His men rejoiced when this temporary position was filled by Brig. Gen. John Gibbon that summer. His regiment's first significant action was the Second Battle of Bull Run, where he demonstrated that he was a tenacious fighter. One soldier in his regiment said that he was "rugged as a wolf."[2] During the fighting against Stonewall Jackson at Brawner's Farm, Cutler was severely wounded in the right thigh, causing him to miss the Maryland Campaign and the Battle of Antietam.

When Gen. Gibbon was promoted to division command, he recommended that the recuperating Cutler be given command of the Iron Brigade, but Col. Solomon Meredith of the 19th Indiana had better political connections and received the appointment, dismaying Cutler. During the Battle of Fredericksburg in December, however, division commander Maj. Gen. Abner Doubleday placed Cutler in temporary command of the Iron Brigade for a few hours, dissatisfied with what he considered tardy execution of orders by Meredith. After the battle, Cutler was promoted to brigadier general, to rank from November 29, 1862. In the spring of 1863, Cutler was given command of the 2nd Brigade, 1st Division (James S. Wadsworth's), I Corps, which he led at the Battle of Chancellorsville in May, but was only lightly engaged.

In the Battle of Gettysburg, Cutler's brigade was one of the first on the field on July 1, 1863. They were heavily engaged north of the Chambersburg Pike, withstanding multiple Confederate assaults from the divisions of Henry Heth and Robert E. Rodes, coming in from the west and north. By the time the I Corps line broke at 4 p.m., his brigade had suffered over 50% casualties. During the frantic retreat through the town of Gettysburg, Cutler had two horses shot out from under him. For the remainder of the three-day battle, Cutler's brigade occupied defensive positions on Cemetery Hill and, taking advantage of entrenchments, suffered few additional casualties.

The Army of the Potomac was reorganized in the spring of 1864 and Cutler was given command of the 1st Brigade, 4th Division, V Corps, on March 25. After Gen. Wadsworth was mortally wounded at the Battle of the Wilderness, Cutler assumed command of the 4th Division on May 6. He led the division through the rest of the Overland Campaign and into the Siege of Petersburg. At the Battle of Globe Tavern on August 21, 1864, he was struck in the face and badly disfigured by a shell fragment. He was brevetted to major general as of August 19, but he was forced to leave field command. He spent the remainder of the war as an invalid, administering the draft in Jackson, Michigan.

[edit] Postbellum

Cutler resigned from the Army on June 30, 1865, his health deteriorating rapidly. He died from a stroke,[3] which doctors attributed to complications from his Globe Tavern wounds, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and is buried there in Forest Home Cemetery.

[edit] References

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Warner, p. 110.
  2. ^ Tagg, p. 19.
  3. ^ Tagg, p. 20.