fbpx
Wikipedia

Charles A. May

Charles Augustus May (1818–1864) was an American officer of the United States Army who served in the Mexican War and other campaigns over a 25-year career. He is best known for successfully leading a cavalry charge against Mexican artillery at the Battle of Resaca de la Palma.

May spent most of his career in the Second Regiment of Dragoons, but also had a brief stint in the First Regiment of Dragoons. As a lieutenant, he participated in the Second Seminole War, where he was responsible for the capture of an important tribal chief. During the Mexican War, he commanded a squadron during Zachary Taylor's expedition, and saw action in the Battles of Palo Alto, Resaca de la Palma, Monterrey, and Buena Vista. He distinguished himself in those actions and was eventually promoted to the rank of brevet colonel, with a permanent rank of major. May later served in various parts of the American frontier, including during the Bleeding Kansas crisis.

He resigned his commission in 1861 and took a job as a railroad executive in New York City, but died three years later. His name is included in a verse that commemorates Mexican War heroes from Maryland in the state song, "Maryland, My Maryland".

Biography Edit

Early life Edit

May was born in Washington, D.C., on August 9, 1818,[1] the son of a doctor in a prominent Baltimore family.[2][3] He received a civil education, but applied for a commission directly to President Andrew Jackson, who was impressed by his soldierly appearance, bearing, and skill at horsemanship.[2] In 1836, he entered the United States Army as a second lieutenant in the Second Regiment of Dragoons.[4] During the Second Seminole War, May was responsible for the capture of King Philip (Ee-mat-la), the Seminole nation's principal chieftain.[5][6] He was promoted from first lieutenant to captain on February 2, 1841.[4]

Mexican War service Edit

On March 8, 1846, after a final attempt to pressure Mexico to settle on a boundary for Texas, Secretary of War William L. Marcy ordered Brigadier General Zachary Taylor to move his army, which included May's dragoon squadron, to the Rio Grande. Taylor's destination was the river's north bank, directly opposite the Mexican town of Matamoros, which stood at a natural choke-point and controlled access to well-traveled routes to the south. When Taylor refused to leave the region, Mexican cavalry ambushed a dragoon detachment under Captain Seth B. Thornton on April 25, 1846, which officially commenced hostilities. On May 8, 1846, the two main forces met at the Battle of Palo Alto, where May's squadron was held in reserve and mounted an unsuccessful cavalry charge.[7][8]

Battle of Resaca de la Palma Edit

Searching for more favorable terrain, the Mexican commander led his army five miles to the south. On May 9, 1846, the pursuing American element met them at the Battle of Resaca de la Palma. General Taylor's force received heavy fire from a battery of eight Mexican artillery pieces, which halted its advance. Taylor ordered Captain May to lead his unit, a squadron consisting of D and E companies of the Second Dragoons, to silence the enemy guns. May told his men to "Remember your Regiment and follow your officers!" Today, the phrase is the unofficial motto of the 2nd Cavalry Regiment, which traces its lineage to May's unit.[9][10][11]

 
Remember Your Regiment, depicts Charles May (center, on white horse) during the Battle of Resaca de la Plama.

He led his cavalry squadron on the charge and, despite heavy casualties, secured the objective and silenced the guns before being forced to withdraw due to a lack of infantry support. The dragoons also captured one of the Mexican commanders, General Rómulo Díaz de la Vega, on the gun line. With the Mexican artillery out of action, the 8th Infantry Regiment and 5th Infantry Regiment were able to maneuver forward and eventually drove the enemy from their positions.[11] Of approximately eighty men, the dragoons lost one lieutenant, seven privates, and twenty-eight horses, with an additional ten privates wounded.[8] Colonel David E. Twiggs, the regimental commander, commented that "After the unsurpassed, if not unequalled charge of Captain May's squadron, the enemy was unable to fire a gun."[2] In his official after-action report, Taylor wrote that "The charge of cavalry against the enemy's batteries on the 9th, was gallantly led by Captain May, and had complete success."[11] After the battle, May received two brevets to the rank of lieutenant colonel.[2]

Battle of Monterrey Edit

After Resaca de la Palma, Mexican forces were cleared from the Texan side of the Rio Grande, but additional operations were required to force Mexico to agree to the border.[12] The Mexican commander, General Mariano Arista, withdrew his forces to Linares, with Taylor in pursuit for sixty miles before returning to Fort Brown for reinforcements. He then marched against Monterrey.[13] The heavily fortified city had a 10,000-man garrison under Arista's replacement, General Pedro de Ampudia, but its supply line running south to Saltillo was vulnerable. Lacking the heavy artillery needed for a siege,[12] Taylor planned a double envelopment, with one division executing a turning movement to cut the supply line and attack from the west and south, and his other two divisions assaulting the north side of the city.[13]

May's squadron was attached as a direct-reporting unit to the newly promoted General Twiggs' 1st Texas Division, which was to be committed to the north side of Monterrey.[12] On September 21, Taylor launched his attack on the city, but failed to synchronize his two forces. Poor Mexican leadership allowed the Americans to avert disaster,[13] and after some intense urban fighting, General Ampudia offered Taylor an eight-week ceasefire that was highly favorable to the Mexicans.[12][13] Taylor accepted, which caused President James K. Polk, furious at the agreement, to transfer most of his forces to Winfield Scott.[12]

Battle of Buena Vista Edit

On February 20, 1847, May led a reconnaissance force that included an attached company of Texas Rangers under Major Ben McCulloch and artillery section of six-pounder guns under Captain J.M. Washington. During the mission, the advanced element encountered small units of Mexican General José Vicente Miñón's cavalry brigade and spotted a dust cloud to the south, presumably produced by a much larger force. Lieutenant Samuel Sturgis was captured during a reconnoiter before May's force caught up with the advanced element, spotted more Mexican lancers, and took up defensive positions. After scouting parties failed to locate the main enemy force, May's unit returned to camp to report to General Taylor. After riding 80 miles in 24 hours, the only fire encountered was from the American sentries as May's force re-entered friendly lines.[14]

Three days later, on February 23, 1847, after having moved to better defensive terrain, General Taylor's force was met by General Antonio López de Santa Anna's numerically superior army just south of Saltillo for the Battle of Buena Vista. May's squadron was reinforced with Troops A and E of the First Dragoons and a squadron of Arkansas cavalry under the command of Captain Albert Pike.[15] The American line was thrown into jeopardy when Colonel Bowles of the Second Indiana Regiment ordered his unit to retreat for reasons unknown. With skillful artillery support from Washington's guns, the situation was restored by the Second Illinois Regiment and rallied Indianans. At that point, Taylor arrived with May's dragoons and the First Mississippi Rifles under Colonel Jefferson Davis, which halted General Anastasio Torrejón's cavalry. Miñón's brigade of 1,500 Mexican lancers flanked the American line and assaulted the supply trains guarded by the Kentucky and Arkansas cavalry, and in the process killed former governor Colonel Archibald Yell. The dragoons counterattacked Miñón's flank and routed the Mexican lancers.[16] May was wounded during the action. On May 24, 1848, he was promoted from brevet lieutenant colonel to brevet colonel for his gallantry, backdated to the day of the battle.[1][4]

Later years Edit

After the Mexican War, May was posted to several parts of the American frontier, including California,[17] New Mexico,[18] and Texas.[19] He served with the First Regiment of Dragoons in the Kansas Territory during its violent abolitionist clashes. On March 3, 1855, he was promoted to major and exchanged positions with another officer to return to his old unit, the Second Dragoons. On October 27, 1855, the regiment marched to Texas, under the command of Albert Sidney Johnson.[4][20]

May resigned his commission as a brevet colonel on April 20, 1861,[19] and moved to New York City, where he served as the vice president of the Eighth Avenue Railroad. He died there on December 24, 1864, at the age of 46.[1] He had a history of heart problems and poor health dating back to at least 1850.[18]

May was described variously as a courageous, sometimes reckless, and unpopular officer.[21] Samuel Chamberlain, who served in the First Dragoons and wrote scathing descriptions of most of his contemporaries, was most critical of May. Chamberlain believed May had received unjustified praise for his actions at Resaca de la Palma and referred to him as the "Murat of America" and an "ass in the lion's skin".[8][14] In 1861, James Ryder Randall referred to "dashing May" alongside other Mexican War heroes from Maryland in a poem that later became the state song, "Maryland, My Maryland".[22]

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c Obituary Archived January 21, 2013, at archive.today The New York Times, December 27, 1864.
  2. ^ a b c d Jacob Charles Peterson, The Military Heroes of the War of 1812: With a Narrative of the War, p. 165–168, 1849, ed. 3, University of Michigan.
  3. ^ Richard O'Connor, The Wayward Commodore 2008-12-01 at the Wayback Machine, American Heritage Magazine, June 1974, vol. 25, issue 4.
  4. ^ a b c d The United States Dragoon Regiment 1781-1874 P. 2, Civil War Days & Those Surnames, August 29, 2008.
  5. ^ William R. Denslow, 10,000 Famous Freemasons July 18, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, vol. 3, K–P, 1957.
  6. ^ Letters of Zachary Taylor from the Battlefields of the Mexican War, 1908.
  7. ^ Guns Along the Rio Grande: Palo Alto and Resaca de la Palma, p. 17, March 15, 2006, United States Army Center of Military History, CMH Pub 73-2, PIN: 081784-000.
  8. ^ a b c Edward J. Nichols, Zach Taylor's Little Army, 1963, Doubleday, ASIN B000PVSM18.
  9. ^ History Fact File[permanent dead link] (PDF), 2nd Cavalry Regiment, United States Army, October 2007.
  10. ^ First Lieutenant Zebulon Montgomery Pike Inge, Last in their Class: Custer, Pickett, and the Goats of West Point, retrieved April 9, 2009.
  11. ^ a b c Official Report of the Battle of Resaca de la Palma 2008-07-04 at the Wayback Machine, Descendents of Mexican War Veterans, May 17, 1846.
  12. ^ a b c d e Gateway South: The Campaign for Monterrey, p. 20, March 15, 2006, United States Army Center of Military History, CMH Pub 73-1, PIN: 081783-000.
  13. ^ a b c d Vincent J. Esposito (ed.), The West Point Atlas of American Wars, vol. I: 1689–1900, p. 14, New York: Frederick A. Praeger, 1960.
  14. ^ a b John Eisenhower, So Far From God: The U.S. War With Mexico, 1846–1848, p. 178–180, 2000, University of Oklahoma Press, ISBN 0-8061-3279-5.
  15. ^ Chronicles of Oklahoma December 31, 2008, at the Wayback Machine, vol. 20, no. 3, Oklahoma Historical Society, Oklahoma State University, September, 1942.
  16. ^ Kevin Wright, Captain Jacob W. Zabriskie: Sesquicentennial Remembrance of the Mexican War, Bergen County Historical Society.
  17. ^ Charles G. Worman, Gunsmoke and Saddle Leather: Firearms in the Nineteenth-Century American West, p. 48, 2005, UNM Press, ISBN 0-8263-3593-4.
  18. ^ a b Letter from Lt. Col. May to Col. John Munroe, US Gen Web Archives, April 25, 1850, retrieved April 9, 2009.
  19. ^ a b Colonel J.K.F. Mansfield's Report of the Inspection of the Department of Texas in 1856, Southwestern Historical Quarterly, vol. 42, no. 4, Texas State Historical Association, January 1939.
  20. ^ Albert Gallatin Brackett, History of the United States Cavalry, p. 168, 1865, Harper & Brothers.
  21. ^ John Eisenhower and Arthur Meier Schlesinger, Jr., Zachary Taylor p. 50, 2008, Macmillan Publishers, ISBN 0-8050-8237-9.
  22. ^ Digital Collection July 27, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, Enoch Pratt Free Library, January 28, 2004.

External links Edit

charles, charles, augustus, 1818, 1864, american, officer, united, states, army, served, mexican, other, campaigns, over, year, career, best, known, successfully, leading, cavalry, charge, against, mexican, artillery, battle, resaca, palma, charles, maybornaug. Charles Augustus May 1818 1864 was an American officer of the United States Army who served in the Mexican War and other campaigns over a 25 year career He is best known for successfully leading a cavalry charge against Mexican artillery at the Battle of Resaca de la Palma Charles MayBornAugust 9 1818Washington D C DiedDecember 24 1864 1864 12 24 aged 46 New York New YorkAllegianceUnited StatesService wbr branchDragoons United States ArmyYears of service1836 1861RankMajorBrevet ColonelUnitSecond Regiment of DragoonsFirst Regiment of DragoonsBattles warsSecond Seminole WarMexican War Battle of Palo Alto Battle of Resaca de la Palma Battle of Monterrey Battle of Buena VistaBleeding KansasMay spent most of his career in the Second Regiment of Dragoons but also had a brief stint in the First Regiment of Dragoons As a lieutenant he participated in the Second Seminole War where he was responsible for the capture of an important tribal chief During the Mexican War he commanded a squadron during Zachary Taylor s expedition and saw action in the Battles of Palo Alto Resaca de la Palma Monterrey and Buena Vista He distinguished himself in those actions and was eventually promoted to the rank of brevet colonel with a permanent rank of major May later served in various parts of the American frontier including during the Bleeding Kansas crisis He resigned his commission in 1861 and took a job as a railroad executive in New York City but died three years later His name is included in a verse that commemorates Mexican War heroes from Maryland in the state song Maryland My Maryland Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Mexican War service 1 2 1 Battle of Resaca de la Palma 1 2 2 Battle of Monterrey 1 2 3 Battle of Buena Vista 1 3 Later years 2 References 3 External linksBiography EditEarly life Edit May was born in Washington D C on August 9 1818 1 the son of a doctor in a prominent Baltimore family 2 3 He received a civil education but applied for a commission directly to President Andrew Jackson who was impressed by his soldierly appearance bearing and skill at horsemanship 2 In 1836 he entered the United States Army as a second lieutenant in the Second Regiment of Dragoons 4 During the Second Seminole War May was responsible for the capture of King Philip Ee mat la the Seminole nation s principal chieftain 5 6 He was promoted from first lieutenant to captain on February 2 1841 4 Mexican War service Edit On March 8 1846 after a final attempt to pressure Mexico to settle on a boundary for Texas Secretary of War William L Marcy ordered Brigadier General Zachary Taylor to move his army which included May s dragoon squadron to the Rio Grande Taylor s destination was the river s north bank directly opposite the Mexican town of Matamoros which stood at a natural choke point and controlled access to well traveled routes to the south When Taylor refused to leave the region Mexican cavalry ambushed a dragoon detachment under Captain Seth B Thornton on April 25 1846 which officially commenced hostilities On May 8 1846 the two main forces met at the Battle of Palo Alto where May s squadron was held in reserve and mounted an unsuccessful cavalry charge 7 8 Battle of Resaca de la Palma Edit Searching for more favorable terrain the Mexican commander led his army five miles to the south On May 9 1846 the pursuing American element met them at the Battle of Resaca de la Palma General Taylor s force received heavy fire from a battery of eight Mexican artillery pieces which halted its advance Taylor ordered Captain May to lead his unit a squadron consisting of D and E companies of the Second Dragoons to silence the enemy guns May told his men to Remember your Regiment and follow your officers Today the phrase is the unofficial motto of the 2nd Cavalry Regiment which traces its lineage to May s unit 9 10 11 Remember Your Regiment depicts Charles May center on white horse during the Battle of Resaca de la Plama He led his cavalry squadron on the charge and despite heavy casualties secured the objective and silenced the guns before being forced to withdraw due to a lack of infantry support The dragoons also captured one of the Mexican commanders General Romulo Diaz de la Vega on the gun line With the Mexican artillery out of action the 8th Infantry Regiment and 5th Infantry Regiment were able to maneuver forward and eventually drove the enemy from their positions 11 Of approximately eighty men the dragoons lost one lieutenant seven privates and twenty eight horses with an additional ten privates wounded 8 Colonel David E Twiggs the regimental commander commented that After the unsurpassed if not unequalled charge of Captain May s squadron the enemy was unable to fire a gun 2 In his official after action report Taylor wrote that The charge of cavalry against the enemy s batteries on the 9th was gallantly led by Captain May and had complete success 11 After the battle May received two brevets to the rank of lieutenant colonel 2 Battle of Monterrey Edit After Resaca de la Palma Mexican forces were cleared from the Texan side of the Rio Grande but additional operations were required to force Mexico to agree to the border 12 The Mexican commander General Mariano Arista withdrew his forces to Linares with Taylor in pursuit for sixty miles before returning to Fort Brown for reinforcements He then marched against Monterrey 13 The heavily fortified city had a 10 000 man garrison under Arista s replacement General Pedro de Ampudia but its supply line running south to Saltillo was vulnerable Lacking the heavy artillery needed for a siege 12 Taylor planned a double envelopment with one division executing a turning movement to cut the supply line and attack from the west and south and his other two divisions assaulting the north side of the city 13 May s squadron was attached as a direct reporting unit to the newly promoted General Twiggs 1st Texas Division which was to be committed to the north side of Monterrey 12 On September 21 Taylor launched his attack on the city but failed to synchronize his two forces Poor Mexican leadership allowed the Americans to avert disaster 13 and after some intense urban fighting General Ampudia offered Taylor an eight week ceasefire that was highly favorable to the Mexicans 12 13 Taylor accepted which caused President James K Polk furious at the agreement to transfer most of his forces to Winfield Scott 12 Battle of Buena Vista Edit On February 20 1847 May led a reconnaissance force that included an attached company of Texas Rangers under Major Ben McCulloch and artillery section of six pounder guns under Captain J M Washington During the mission the advanced element encountered small units of Mexican General Jose Vicente Minon s cavalry brigade and spotted a dust cloud to the south presumably produced by a much larger force Lieutenant Samuel Sturgis was captured during a reconnoiter before May s force caught up with the advanced element spotted more Mexican lancers and took up defensive positions After scouting parties failed to locate the main enemy force May s unit returned to camp to report to General Taylor After riding 80 miles in 24 hours the only fire encountered was from the American sentries as May s force re entered friendly lines 14 Three days later on February 23 1847 after having moved to better defensive terrain General Taylor s force was met by General Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna s numerically superior army just south of Saltillo for the Battle of Buena Vista May s squadron was reinforced with Troops A and E of the First Dragoons and a squadron of Arkansas cavalry under the command of Captain Albert Pike 15 The American line was thrown into jeopardy when Colonel Bowles of the Second Indiana Regiment ordered his unit to retreat for reasons unknown With skillful artillery support from Washington s guns the situation was restored by the Second Illinois Regiment and rallied Indianans At that point Taylor arrived with May s dragoons and the First Mississippi Rifles under Colonel Jefferson Davis which halted General Anastasio Torrejon s cavalry Minon s brigade of 1 500 Mexican lancers flanked the American line and assaulted the supply trains guarded by the Kentucky and Arkansas cavalry and in the process killed former governor Colonel Archibald Yell The dragoons counterattacked Minon s flank and routed the Mexican lancers 16 May was wounded during the action On May 24 1848 he was promoted from brevet lieutenant colonel to brevet colonel for his gallantry backdated to the day of the battle 1 4 Later years Edit After the Mexican War May was posted to several parts of the American frontier including California 17 New Mexico 18 and Texas 19 He served with the First Regiment of Dragoons in the Kansas Territory during its violent abolitionist clashes On March 3 1855 he was promoted to major and exchanged positions with another officer to return to his old unit the Second Dragoons On October 27 1855 the regiment marched to Texas under the command of Albert Sidney Johnson 4 20 May resigned his commission as a brevet colonel on April 20 1861 19 and moved to New York City where he served as the vice president of the Eighth Avenue Railroad He died there on December 24 1864 at the age of 46 1 He had a history of heart problems and poor health dating back to at least 1850 18 May was described variously as a courageous sometimes reckless and unpopular officer 21 Samuel Chamberlain who served in the First Dragoons and wrote scathing descriptions of most of his contemporaries was most critical of May Chamberlain believed May had received unjustified praise for his actions at Resaca de la Palma and referred to him as the Murat of America and an ass in the lion s skin 8 14 In 1861 James Ryder Randall referred to dashing May alongside other Mexican War heroes from Maryland in a poem that later became the state song Maryland My Maryland 22 References Edit a b c Obituary Archived January 21 2013 at archive today The New York Times December 27 1864 a b c d Jacob Charles Peterson The Military Heroes of the War of 1812 With a Narrative of the War p 165 168 1849 ed 3 University of Michigan Richard O Connor The Wayward Commodore Archived 2008 12 01 at the Wayback Machine American Heritage Magazine June 1974 vol 25 issue 4 a b c d The United States Dragoon Regiment 1781 1874 P 2 Civil War Days amp Those Surnames August 29 2008 William R Denslow 10 000 Famous Freemasons Archived July 18 2011 at the Wayback Machine vol 3 K P 1957 Letters of Zachary Taylor from the Battlefields of the Mexican War 1908 Guns Along the Rio Grande Palo Alto and Resaca de la Palma p 17 March 15 2006 United States Army Center of Military History CMH Pub 73 2 PIN 081784 000 a b c Edward J Nichols Zach Taylor s Little Army 1963 Doubleday ASIN B000PVSM18 History Fact File permanent dead link PDF 2nd Cavalry Regiment United States Army October 2007 First Lieutenant Zebulon Montgomery Pike Inge Last in their Class Custer Pickett and the Goats of West Point retrieved April 9 2009 a b c Official Report of the Battle of Resaca de la Palma Archived 2008 07 04 at the Wayback Machine Descendents of Mexican War Veterans May 17 1846 a b c d e Gateway South The Campaign for Monterrey p 20 March 15 2006 United States Army Center of Military History CMH Pub 73 1 PIN 081783 000 a b c d Vincent J Esposito ed The West Point Atlas of American Wars vol I 1689 1900 p 14 New York Frederick A Praeger 1960 a b John Eisenhower So Far From God The U S War With Mexico 1846 1848 p 178 180 2000 University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 0 8061 3279 5 Chronicles of Oklahoma Archived December 31 2008 at the Wayback Machine vol 20 no 3 Oklahoma Historical Society Oklahoma State University September 1942 Kevin Wright Captain Jacob W Zabriskie Sesquicentennial Remembrance of the Mexican War Bergen County Historical Society Charles G Worman Gunsmoke and Saddle Leather Firearms in the Nineteenth Century American West p 48 2005 UNM Press ISBN 0 8263 3593 4 a b Letter from Lt Col May to Col John Munroe US Gen Web Archives April 25 1850 retrieved April 9 2009 a b Colonel J K F Mansfield s Report of the Inspection of the Department of Texas in 1856 Southwestern Historical Quarterly vol 42 no 4 Texas State Historical Association January 1939 Albert Gallatin Brackett History of the United States Cavalry p 168 1865 Harper amp Brothers John Eisenhower and Arthur Meier Schlesinger Jr Zachary Taylor p 50 2008 Macmillan Publishers ISBN 0 8050 8237 9 Digital Collection Archived July 27 2011 at the Wayback Machine Enoch Pratt Free Library January 28 2004 External links Edit Biography portalArtists depictions of the Battle of Resaca de la Palma New York Public Library Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Charles A May amp oldid 1166982883, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.