Camille Armand Jules Marie, Prince de Polignac

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Camille Armand Jules Marie Prince de Polignac
Camille Armand Jules Marie Prince de Polignac

Camille Armand Jules Marie, Prince de Polignac (February 16, 1832November 15, 1913) was a major general in the Confederate States Army during the American Civil War. He was one of the few French-born generals in the war.

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[edit] Early life and career

Polignac was born in Millemont Seine-et-Oise, France to nobility. His father was Jules, prince de Polignac, who had been president of the Council of Charles X of France. Through his distant cousin, Pierre de Polignac, he was related to the Grimaldis of Monaco (Prince Albert II).

Polignac studied mathematics and music at St. Stanislas College in the 1840s. In 1853 he joined the French army. He served in the Crimean War from 1854 to 1855, receiving a commission as a second lieutenant. He resigned from the army in 1859 and traveled to Central America to study geography and political economy, as well as the native plant life. He then visited the United States in the early 1860s.

[edit] Civil War

With the outbreak of the Civil War, Polignac initially served on the staffs of generals P. G. T. Beauregard and Braxton Bragg as a lieutenant colonel. He served at the Battle of Shiloh and the subsequent Siege of Corinth. In January 1863, he was promoted to brigadier general. Two months later, he was transferred to the Trans-Mississippi Department and assigned command of a Texas infantry brigade. Polignac is best known for his leadership at the Battle of Mansfield, April 8, 1864, in De Soto Parish, Louisiana, a Confederate victory in the first major action of the Red River Campaign. Polignac received a battlefield promotion at Mansfield to division command after the death of Alfred Mouton.

He was formally promoted to major general on June 14, 1864. Polignac led the division throughout the remainder of the campaign and during its service in Arkansas in the fall of 1864. In March 1865 he was sent to Napoleon III of France to request intervention on behalf of the Confederacy but arrived too late to accomplish his mission.

[edit] Postbellum

After the Civil War, Polignac returned to his large estate in France, and resumed his travels and studies in Central America. He published several articles on his Civil War experiences. He returned to the French army as a brigadier general and commanded a division in the Franco-Prussian War (1870 to 1871). In 1874 he married Marie Adolphine Longenberger, who died at the birth of their daughter. He married Elizabeth Margaret Knight in 1883, and they had two daughters and one son. Polignac continued to study mathematics and music until his health failed.

When he died in Paris at the age of 81, Polignac was the last-living Confederate major general. He was buried with his wife's family in Germany in Hauptfreidhof, Frankfurt-on-Main.

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