William "Bull" Nelson
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William "Bull" Nelson | |
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September 27, 1824 – September 29, 1862 (aged 38) | |
Major General William "Bull" Nelson |
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Nickname | "Bull" |
Place of birth | Maysville, Kentucky |
Place of death | Louisville, Kentucky |
Allegiance | United States of America |
Service/branch | United States Army |
Years of service | 1840–62 |
Rank | Major General (Civil War; both Navy and Army) |
Battles/wars | Mexican-American War *Siege of Veracruz American Civil War *Battle of Shiloh *Siege of Corinth *Battle of Richmond |
William "Bull" Nelson (September 27, 1824 – September 29, 1862) was a U.S. Navy officer and later a Union general in the American Civil War who commanded the Army of Kentucky. He holds the distinction of being the only naval officer to achieve the rank of major general on either side of the Civil War. He was shot and killed by a fellow Union general, Jefferson C. Davis, during an argument in 1862.
The son of a physician, Nelson was born near Maysville, Kentucky, and attended Norwich Academy. He enlisted in the U.S. Navy as a midshipman on January 28, 1840, and achieved the rank of lieutenant by 1855. While in the navy, he commanded a battery at the Siege of Veracruz in 1847, served in the Mediterranean and the South Pacific, and in 1858, as commander of the Niagara, transported to Africa the negroes who had been rescued from the slave ship Echo. At the outbreak of the Civil War, he was placed in command of the gunboats on the Ohio River.
Nelson's family was friends with President Abraham Lincoln. While William's brother Thomas Henry Nelson of Terre Haute, Indiana, was appointed United States minister to Chile, William made several surveys of political sentiment in Kentucky and reported his findings directly to the president. In April, Nelson recruited for the Union in Kentucky and established Camp Dick Robinson in Garrard County, making it a rallying place for loyal Kentuckians. He was detailed for duty in the U.S. Army on September 16, 1861, with the rank of brigadier general. His first assignment was as a brigade commander in the Department of the Cumberland, but by December he commanded a division in the Army of the Ohio under Major General Don Carlos Buell.
Nelson's division first saw combat on the second day of the Battle of Shiloh (April 6 and April 7, 1862), when Buell's army arrived in the nick of time to counterattack the Confederates and bring victory to Ulysses S. Grant. He participated in the advance on Corinth under Henry W. Halleck and in Buell's advance upon Chattanooga. He was promoted to major general on July 17, 1862, and given command of the Army of Kentucky in August. On August 30, 1862, Nelson was soundly defeated by Edmund Kirby Smith's Confederate forces at the Battle of Richmond. He was slightly wounded himself, but lost over 5,300 men (compared to the Confederate loss of 451). He was in command at Louisville, Kentucky, when Confederate General Braxton Bragg threatened that city.
He was killed at the Galt House in Louisville, when he was shot in the chest by his fellow officer, Brigadier General Jefferson C. Davis, who was offended by insults on prior occasions and whose face had just been slapped by Nelson. Nelson died within a few minutes and is buried in his place of birth, Maysville, Kentucky. Davis was arrested but never tried for killing Nelson.
[edit] See also
- List of American Civil War generals
- Blockade of Africa
- Louisville in the American Civil War
- USS Niagara (1855)
[edit] References
- Eicher, John H., and Eicher, David J., Civil War High Commands, Stanford University Press, 2001, ISBN 0-8047-3641-3.
- Warner, Ezra J., Generals in Blue: Lives of the Union Commanders, Louisiana State University Press, 1964, ISBN 0-8071-0822-7.