Sidney Sherman

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Sidney Sherman (July 23, 1805August 1, 1873) was a general and key leader in the Texas Army during the 1836 Texas Revolution and afterwards in the fledgling Republic of Texas.

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[edit] Early life

Sherman was born in Marlboro, Massachusetts, a son of Micha and Susanna Dennison Frost Sherman. When his parents died, leaving him orphaned at the age of 16, Sherman moved to Boston, where he found employment in a store.

He soon moved to New York City, and in 1831, settled in Newport, Kentucky, where he engaged in the manufacture of cotton bagging. On April 27, 1835, Sherman married Catharine Isabel Cox (1815–1865) of Frankfort, Kentucky. They would have 8 children. Sherman's business prospered, and he became well known and influential in the community.

[edit] Texas Revolution and the Republic of Texas

In November 1835, a public meeting was held in neighboring Cincinnati to encourage support for Texas in her struggle against the Mexican government. A number of Cincinnatians and Northern Kentuckians pledged funding for ammunition and weapons (including two artillery pieces that later became famous as the "Twin Sisters" at the Battle of San Jacinto. The left via riverboat to start their journey for Texas on January 6, 1836, with Sherman serving as captain of the company, which became known as the "Kentucky Rifles." Local citizens helped fund uniforms and donated a flag.

Sherman arrived in Texas in late January, and joined Sam Houston and the main Texas Army near Gonzales on February 3, 1836. On March 12, many of the new volunteers for the army were organized into one regiment with Edward Burleson elected as colonel and Sherman as lieutenant colonel. With volunteers still streaming into Texas, enough men were recruited to fill out a second regiment. On April 8, the army was reorganized and the Second Regiment formed with Sherman as the colonel, his old company remaining in the First Regiment. Sherman led his troops at the Battle of San Jacinto, and his men are generally credited as first uttering the famous warcry, "Remember the Alamo! Remember Goliad!"

In August, Sherman became colonel of the cavalry of the new Republic of Texas, and returned home to Kentucky to recruit more men for the Texas army. For his services in the revolution, he was granted large tracts of land as a token of gratitude by the legislature. When he returned to Texas in December, he brought his wife and her young 11-year-old brother back with him, settling near San Jacinto Bay and constructing a small home. Other family members soon settled nearby, although yellow fever killed Sherman's brother Dana and his sister-in-law. Sherman served in the cavalry commander's role until mid-December 1837.

Sherman was a member of the Texas House of Representatives, from Harris County, during the Seventh Congress, November 4, 1842 to January 17, 1843. He introduced a bill providing for the election of a Major General of Militia for the protection of the frontier, which was passed over the veto of President Sam Houston. Thomas J. Rusk briefly assumed the position, with Sherman as his successor in mid-1843.

[edit] Later life

In 1846, General Sherman purchased 4,000 acres of land near Harrisburg and began promoting the Buffalo Bayou, Brazos, and Colorado Railway (later part of the Southern Pacific system). He constructed a mansion in 1847, as well as a nearby sawmill. However, both were lost in separate fires within a decade. Without insurance and having lost most of his fortune, he moved to Galveston and opened a hotel.

During the American Civil War, Sherman was requested by the local Committee of Safety of the Confederacy to take full charge of affairs at Galveston, with full authority to put the island in a state of defense. In 1862 he moved with his family to his old home on the San Jacinto Bay and with them went former President David G. Burnet. Early in 1863, the Shermans moved to Richmond, Texas, where they remained until the close of the war. Mrs. Sherman died in January 1865.

Sidney Sherman died 8 years later in Galveston. He was originally buried near his wife and dead son, but was reinterred in 1894 in the Lake View Cemetery in Galveston, next to former President David Burnet. The Sidney Sherman Chapter of the Daughters of the Republic of Texas dedicated a joint monument to their memories on March 2, 1894.

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