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Don Carlos Buell

Don Carlos Buell (March 23, 1818 – November 19, 1898) was a United States Army officer who fought in the Seminole War, the Mexican–American War, and the American Civil War. Buell led Union armies in two great Civil War battles—Shiloh and Perryville. The nation was angry at his failure to defeat the outnumbered Confederates after Perryville, or to secure East Tennessee. Historians generally concur that he was a brave and industrious master of logistics, but was too cautious and too rigid to meet the great challenges he faced in 1862. Buell was relieved of field command in late 1862 and made no more significant military contributions.[1]

Don Carlos Buell
Born(1818-03-23)March 23, 1818
Lowell, Ohio, U.S.
DiedNovember 19, 1898(1898-11-19) (aged 80)
Rockport, Kentucky, U.S.
Place of burial
Allegiance United States (Union)
Service/branchUnited States Army
Union Army
Years of service1841–1864
Rank Major General
Commands heldArmy of the Ohio
Battles/warsSeminole War
Mexican–American War

American Civil War

Alma materUnited States Military Academy Class of 1841
Other workPresident of the Green River Iron Company, pension agent

Early life and education

Don Carlos Buell was born in Lowell, Ohio, the eldest of nine children born to Salmon and Elizabeth Buell.[2] He was a first cousin of George P. Buell, also a Union general. Buell's father died when he was 8 years old, and his uncle took him in and raised him. As a child, Buell had a difficult time making friends due to his distant, introverted personality and was often made fun of by other children. After winning a fight with a neighborhood bully, he became awakened to the idea that discipline and determination could overcome any obstacle.[citation needed] Buell's uncle sent him to a Presbyterian school which stressed duty, self-discipline, patriotism, and belief in a Supreme Being.

George Buell obtained for his nephew an appointment to West Point, but despite his high intelligence and good math skills, he accumulated numerous demerits and disciplinary problems and graduated in 1841 32nd in his class of 52. After graduation, Buell was commissioned a second lieutenant in the 3rd U.S. Infantry regiment and sent to fight in the Seminole Wars in Florida but did not see any combat. After the 3rd Infantry was transferred to Illinois, Buell found himself court-martialed for getting into an argument with an enlisted man and beating him over the head with the blunt end of his sword. However, an Army tribunal cleared him of any wrongdoing. There was considerable opposition to the verdict, and even General Winfield Scott felt that Buell needed to be punished for his actions, but the court would not retry the case.[3]

In the Mexican–American War, he served under both Zachary Taylor and Winfield Scott. He was brevetted three times for bravery and was wounded at Churubusco. Between the wars he served in the U.S. Army Adjutant General's office and as an adjutant in California, reaching the rank of captain in 1851 and lieutenant colonel by the time the Civil War began.

Civil War

Initial postings

At the start of the Civil War, Buell sought an important command, but instead his friend George McClellan emerged as the champion of the Union war effort. Buell himself was sent all the way out to California. After the Union defeat at Bull Run, McClellan summoned him back east where he was quickly promoted to brigadier general of volunteers, to rank from May 17, 1861. Buell received offers to take a command in Kentucky, but instead he stayed in Washington helping organize the nascent Army of the Potomac and being appointed as a division commander. In November, McClellan succeeded Winfield Scott as general-in-chief of the Army, and decided to post Buell out west, dividing the trans-Appalachia theater between him and Maj. Gen Henry Halleck.[2] In November 1861, he succeeded Brig. Gen. William T. Sherman in command at Louisville, Kentucky, as commander of the newly formed Army of the Ohio, which at this time was a barely-disciplined rabble. Buell immediately set himself to work shaping the raw recruits into a fighting force. Although the Lincoln administration pressured Buell to occupy Eastern Tennessee, an area of strong Unionist sentiment, Buell was in no hurry, and even McClellan became impatient with his slow progress. Buell's excuse was that the railroad network in this area was poor, and he would have to rely on wagons for army supply that could be vulnerable to Confederate cavalry. Instead, he proposed a coordinated effort between him and Halleck to cut off Nashville. Halleck reluctantly agreed to the plan, which was helped along by Grant's capture of Fort Henry and Fort Donelson. Although the city fell to the Army of the Ohio on February 25, 1862, Halleck's relationship with Buell was strained. The same month, Andrew Johnson was made military governor of Tennessee and developed a lasting grudge against Buell for failing to liberate Eastern Tennessee. On March 21, Buell was promoted to major general of volunteers,[4] but at the same time, Halleck rose to department commander which made Buell subordinate to him.[3]

Shiloh

 
After the war Buell drafted and published a map of the Battle of Shiloh.

At the start of April, Buell was ordered to reinforce Grant's Army of the Tennessee, then encamped at Pittsburg Landing next to the Tennessee River. On the morning of April 6, the Confederates launched a surprise attack on Grant's army, beginning one of the largest and bloodiest battles of the war. After the Army of the Ohio arrived the next day, the combined Union forces repulsed the Confederates. Although Buell was the junior of the two generals in rank, he insisted that he was acting independently and would not accept orders from Grant.[5] Buell considered himself the victor of Shiloh and denigrated Grant's contribution, writing after the war that he had no "marked influence that he exerted upon the fortune of the day." Contemporary historians, such as Larry Daniels and Kenneth W. Noe, consider that Grant actually saved himself by the conclusion of the first day of battle and that the rivalry between Grant and Buell hampered the conduct of battle on the second day. The commanders operated almost completely independently of each other and Buell "proved slow and hesitant to commit himself."[6][7]

Following Shiloh, Governor Johnson objected to Buell's plans to withdraw the Nashville garrison on the grounds that Confederate sympathy in the city was still strong. However, Halleck sided with Buell and insisted that all available troops in the department were needed for the assault on Corinth. Henry Halleck arrived in person to take command of Grant and Buell's armies. The combined Union force, 100,000 men strong, began an extremely sluggish pursuit against P.G.T. Beauregard's Army of Mississippi, which had retreated into northern Mississippi. Despite a more than 2-1 numerical advantage, Halleck moved slowly. However, Buell was even slower and quickly caught the ire of Halleck. During the march to Corinth, Buell took extensive pauses to repair the railroad lines and would not entertain suggestions of allowing his army to live off the land. To that end, he court-martialed Col. John Turchin for allowing his soldiers to loot area homes. This action was not popular either with Buell's troops or the War Department, and President Lincoln ultimately overturned the verdict, while Turchin eventually got promoted to brigadier general.

The Siege of Corinth ended in the Confederates abandoning the city on May 25. Afterwards, Halleck split up the two armies and sent Buell eastward to capture Chattanooga while Grant remained in the Corinth area. In July, Halleck was summoned back to Washington to replace George McClellan as commander-in-chief of all Union armies, thus effectively returning the two Western armies to independent action. Buell's advance towards Chattanooga nearly rivaled the earlier march on Corinth for sluggishness, with extensive pauses to stop and repair railroad lines. When Nathan Bedford Forrest's cavalry then ransacked the Army of Ohio's supply lines, Buell all but terminated the effort to take Chattanooga. Thus after a busy winter and spring, activity in the Western theater during the summer of 1862 almost completely ground to a halt. On July 17, Buell was promoted to colonel in the regular army.[8]

The summer months were increasingly frustrating for the Army of the Ohio, which was averaging barely a mile a day. Bored soldiers took to uncontrollable looting of the countryside and harassment of slaves. These infractions in their turn were punished harshly by Buell and by mid-August, morale in the army had almost collapsed. Despite protests from the War Department to move faster, Buell insisted that he could not hold Chattanooga for any length of time without proper caution and preparedness.[9]

Grant, despite his professional rivalry following Shiloh, addressed these charges against Buell in his memoirs, writing:

General Buell was a brave, intelligent officer, with as much professional pride and ambition of a commendable sort as I ever knew. ... [He] became an object of harsh criticism later, some going so far as to challenge his loyalty. No one who knew him ever believed him capable of a dishonorable act, and nothing could be more dishonorable than to accept high rank and command in war and then betray the trust. When I came into command of the army in 1864, I requested the Secretary of War to restore General Buell to duty. ... The opportunity frequently occurred for me to defend General Buell against what I believed to be most unjust charges. On one occasion a correspondent put in my mouth the very charge I had so often refuted—of disloyalty. This brought from General Buell a very severe retort, which I saw in the New York World some time before I received the letter itself. I could very well understand his grievance at seeing untrue and disgraceful charges apparently sustained by an officer who, at the time, was at the head of the army. I replied to him, but not through the press. I kept no copy of my letter, nor did I ever see it in print; neither did I receive an answer.[10]

Kentucky

In September, Confederate armies under Edmund Kirby Smith and Braxton Bragg invaded Kentucky and Buell was forced to take action. Buell wired Halleck that he planned to march on Louisville, but Halleck, already frustrated with his glacial movements in Tennessee, replied back that he did not care where Buell marched just as long as he was doing something to take the fight to the enemy. The Kentucky campaign did have the effect of re-energizing Buell's demoralized soldiers who were excited to finally be going somewhere and march into a state that had been mostly untouched by war. Louisville was occupied by the Army of the Ohio on September 25, but despite learning that Bragg's army was in nearby Munfordville, Buell, convinced that he was outnumbered, declined to pursue Bragg. A single corps of Buell's army was attacked by Bragg at the Battle of Perryville on October 8, 1862, while Buell, a couple of miles behind the action, was not aware that a battle was taking place until late in the day and thus did not effectively engage the full strength of his army to defeat the smaller enemy force. Buell was urged by his officers to counterattack the next day, but he refused on the grounds that he did not know exactly how many Confederates he was facing. By morning, Bragg ordered a retreat from the field. Although Perryville was tactically indecisive, it halted the Confederate invasion of Kentucky and forced their withdrawal back into Tennessee.

Although the battle ended with the Union army in possession of the field, the Confederates had escaped to fight another day, and Buell had not engaged most of his army in spite of having nearly 60,000 men to face a mere 16,000 Confederates. Even some of Buell's own officers and enlisted men began suspecting him of disloyalty, in part because he was one of a handful of Union generals to have owned slaves prior to the war. An Indiana artillery officer wrote "After Perryville, I became convinced that the sooner Buell was relieved of command of the Army of the Ohio, the better." When President Lincoln urged an immediate pursuit of Bragg, he was told by Buell that the route directly south from Perryville into Eastern Tennessee was rough, wooded country with few roads and would be too difficult to maneuver through. He said that the only sensible route was to go back west to Nashville, then travel east across Tennessee to Chattanooga. Halleck wired Buell telling him "The president does not understand why we cannot march as the enemy marches, live as he lives, and fight as he fights, unless we admit that there is some inherent defect in our generals and soldiers."

On October 24, Buell was relieved from command of the Army of the Ohio and replaced by Maj. Gen William Rosecrans. A military committee investigated Buell's conduct during and after Perryville, but came to no conclusions, and Buell considered his reputation vindicated as he did not compromise his principles in waging war.[11] After his dismissal, he was ordered to Indianapolis to await future assignments, but none came. When Grant was appointed general-in-chief of the army in March 1864, he offered Buell a possible assignment but he refused to serve under either Sherman or George Thomas on the grounds that he outranked both of them. In his memoirs, Grant called this "the worst excuse a soldier can make for declining service". On May 23, Buell's volunteer commission expired and he reverted to the regular army rank of colonel. Unable to tolerate this demotion, he resigned from the army on June 1.[4][12]

Later life and death

Following the war Buell lived again in Indiana, and then in Kentucky, employed in the iron and coal industry as president of the Green River Iron Company. He continued to be a target of criticism for his conduct during the war. Although Buell did not write any memoirs, he did produce a series of newspaper articles defending himself and criticizing Grant, particularly for the events at Shiloh, and Buell to his dying day maintained that he was the hero of the battle. The death of his wife in 1881 was very hard on him, and his final years were marked by poverty and ill health. By 1898 he was an invalid, and he died on November 19. He was buried in Bellefontaine Cemetery in St. Louis.

Legacy

Buell earned the nickname "The McClellan of the West" for his cautious approach and desire for a limited war that would not disrupt civilian life in the South or interfere with slavery. Although he staunchly opposed secession, he was never able to reconcile himself with the Lincoln administration. Buell's wife had owned slaves prior to the war, and their marriage, although she freed them shortly after the Confederate attack on Fort Sumter. Buell had no personal animosity towards slavery or the Southern way of life. He continued to be highly regarded by fellow generals, many of whom felt that the White House had been unjust towards him. William T. Sherman wrote to his brother John, a Congressman, "You have driven off McClellan, and is Burnside any better? You have driven off Buell, and is Rosecrans any better?" His harsh discipline and inability to relate to his soldiers on a personal level may have also contributed to his downfall.

Buell Armory on the University of Kentucky campus in Lexington, Kentucky, is named after Buell.

Buell Island in his hometown of Lowell is named after him.

His personal papers, maps, correspondence, uniform, West Point diploma and other possessions are held at the University of Notre Dame.[13]

See also

References

  1. ^ Allan Nevins, War for the Union (1960) vol 2 pp 288-89, citing also Lew Wallace.
  2. ^ a b Eicher, p. 152.
  3. ^ a b Daniel 1997, pp. 56–57.
  4. ^ a b The Union Army: A History of Military Affairs in the Loyal States, 1861-65. Volume VIII. Madison, Wisc.: Federal Publishing Co. 1908. p. 41.
  5. ^ Daniel 1997, p. 249.
  6. ^ Daniel 1997, pp. 265–266, 293–293, 306.
  7. ^ Buell, Shiloh Reviewed, p. 536; Noe, p. 20.
  8. ^ Emerson, pp. 121-31.
  9. ^ Grimsley, p. 85.
  10. ^ Grant, vol. 1, pp. 295-96.
  11. ^ Noe, pp. 339-43.
  12. ^ Grant, vol. 2, p. 121.
  13. ^ Humanities, National Endowment for the (1917-12-22). "The Irish standard. [volume] (Minneapolis, Minn. ;) 1886-1920, December 22, 1917, Image 1". The Irish Standard. ISSN 2475-2894. Retrieved 2021-04-25.

Bibliography

  • Buell, Don Carlos. "Shiloh Reviewed." In Battles and Leaders of the Civil War, vol. 1, edited by Robert Underwood Johnson and Clarence C. Buel. New York: Century Co., 1884–1888. OCLC 2048818.
  • Daniel, Larry J. (1997). Shiloh: The Battle That Changed the Civil War. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0-684-80375-5.
  • Eicher, John H., and David J. Eicher. Civil War High Commands. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2001. ISBN 0-8047-3641-3.
  • Emerson, Col. John W. "Grant's Life in the West and His Mississippi Valley Campaigns." Midland Monthly 10 (1898).
  • Grant, Ulysses S. Personal Memoirs of U. S. Grant. 2 vols. Charles L. Webster & Company, 1885–86. ISBN 0-914427-67-9.
  • Grimsley, Mark. The Hard Hand of War. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1995. ISBN 0-521-59941-5.
  • Noe, Kenneth W. Perryville: This Grand Havoc of Battle. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 2001. ISBN 978-0-8131-2209-0.
  • United States Works Progress Administration (Ohio). Williams History of Washington County, Ohio 1788–1881. Cleveland, Ohio: H. Z. Williams & Brother, 1881.

Further reading

  • Engle, Stephen Douglas. Don Carlos Buell: Most Promising of All. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1999. ISBN 0-8078-2512-3.

External links

Military offices
Preceded by
none
Commander of the Army of the Ohio
November 9, 1861 – October 24, 1862
Succeeded by

[[Category:American slave owner ]]

carlos, buell, march, 1818, november, 1898, united, states, army, officer, fought, seminole, mexican, american, american, civil, buell, union, armies, great, civil, battles, shiloh, perryville, nation, angry, failure, defeat, outnumbered, confederates, after, . Don Carlos Buell March 23 1818 November 19 1898 was a United States Army officer who fought in the Seminole War the Mexican American War and the American Civil War Buell led Union armies in two great Civil War battles Shiloh and Perryville The nation was angry at his failure to defeat the outnumbered Confederates after Perryville or to secure East Tennessee Historians generally concur that he was a brave and industrious master of logistics but was too cautious and too rigid to meet the great challenges he faced in 1862 Buell was relieved of field command in late 1862 and made no more significant military contributions 1 Don Carlos BuellBorn 1818 03 23 March 23 1818Lowell Ohio U S DiedNovember 19 1898 1898 11 19 aged 80 Rockport Kentucky U S Place of burialBellefontaine Cemetery St Louis Missouri U S Allegiance United States Union Service wbr branchUnited States ArmyUnion ArmyYears of service1841 1864RankMajor GeneralCommands heldArmy of the OhioBattles warsSeminole WarMexican American War Battle of Churubusco WIA American Civil War Battle of Shiloh Siege of Corinth Battle of PerryvilleAlma materUnited States Military Academy Class of 1841Other workPresident of the Green River Iron Company pension agent Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Civil War 2 1 Initial postings 2 2 Shiloh 2 3 Kentucky 3 Later life and death 4 Legacy 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Bibliography 7 Further reading 8 External linksEarly life and education EditDon Carlos Buell was born in Lowell Ohio the eldest of nine children born to Salmon and Elizabeth Buell 2 He was a first cousin of George P Buell also a Union general Buell s father died when he was 8 years old and his uncle took him in and raised him As a child Buell had a difficult time making friends due to his distant introverted personality and was often made fun of by other children After winning a fight with a neighborhood bully he became awakened to the idea that discipline and determination could overcome any obstacle citation needed Buell s uncle sent him to a Presbyterian school which stressed duty self discipline patriotism and belief in a Supreme Being George Buell obtained for his nephew an appointment to West Point but despite his high intelligence and good math skills he accumulated numerous demerits and disciplinary problems and graduated in 1841 32nd in his class of 52 After graduation Buell was commissioned a second lieutenant in the 3rd U S Infantry regiment and sent to fight in the Seminole Wars in Florida but did not see any combat After the 3rd Infantry was transferred to Illinois Buell found himself court martialed for getting into an argument with an enlisted man and beating him over the head with the blunt end of his sword However an Army tribunal cleared him of any wrongdoing There was considerable opposition to the verdict and even General Winfield Scott felt that Buell needed to be punished for his actions but the court would not retry the case 3 In the Mexican American War he served under both Zachary Taylor and Winfield Scott He was brevetted three times for bravery and was wounded at Churubusco Between the wars he served in the U S Army Adjutant General s office and as an adjutant in California reaching the rank of captain in 1851 and lieutenant colonel by the time the Civil War began Civil War EditInitial postings Edit At the start of the Civil War Buell sought an important command but instead his friend George McClellan emerged as the champion of the Union war effort Buell himself was sent all the way out to California After the Union defeat at Bull Run McClellan summoned him back east where he was quickly promoted to brigadier general of volunteers to rank from May 17 1861 Buell received offers to take a command in Kentucky but instead he stayed in Washington helping organize the nascent Army of the Potomac and being appointed as a division commander In November McClellan succeeded Winfield Scott as general in chief of the Army and decided to post Buell out west dividing the trans Appalachia theater between him and Maj Gen Henry Halleck 2 In November 1861 he succeeded Brig Gen William T Sherman in command at Louisville Kentucky as commander of the newly formed Army of the Ohio which at this time was a barely disciplined rabble Buell immediately set himself to work shaping the raw recruits into a fighting force Although the Lincoln administration pressured Buell to occupy Eastern Tennessee an area of strong Unionist sentiment Buell was in no hurry and even McClellan became impatient with his slow progress Buell s excuse was that the railroad network in this area was poor and he would have to rely on wagons for army supply that could be vulnerable to Confederate cavalry Instead he proposed a coordinated effort between him and Halleck to cut off Nashville Halleck reluctantly agreed to the plan which was helped along by Grant s capture of Fort Henry and Fort Donelson Although the city fell to the Army of the Ohio on February 25 1862 Halleck s relationship with Buell was strained The same month Andrew Johnson was made military governor of Tennessee and developed a lasting grudge against Buell for failing to liberate Eastern Tennessee On March 21 Buell was promoted to major general of volunteers 4 but at the same time Halleck rose to department commander which made Buell subordinate to him 3 Shiloh Edit After the war Buell drafted and published a map of the Battle of Shiloh At the start of April Buell was ordered to reinforce Grant s Army of the Tennessee then encamped at Pittsburg Landing next to the Tennessee River On the morning of April 6 the Confederates launched a surprise attack on Grant s army beginning one of the largest and bloodiest battles of the war After the Army of the Ohio arrived the next day the combined Union forces repulsed the Confederates Although Buell was the junior of the two generals in rank he insisted that he was acting independently and would not accept orders from Grant 5 Buell considered himself the victor of Shiloh and denigrated Grant s contribution writing after the war that he had no marked influence that he exerted upon the fortune of the day Contemporary historians such as Larry Daniels and Kenneth W Noe consider that Grant actually saved himself by the conclusion of the first day of battle and that the rivalry between Grant and Buell hampered the conduct of battle on the second day The commanders operated almost completely independently of each other and Buell proved slow and hesitant to commit himself 6 7 Following Shiloh Governor Johnson objected to Buell s plans to withdraw the Nashville garrison on the grounds that Confederate sympathy in the city was still strong However Halleck sided with Buell and insisted that all available troops in the department were needed for the assault on Corinth Henry Halleck arrived in person to take command of Grant and Buell s armies The combined Union force 100 000 men strong began an extremely sluggish pursuit against P G T Beauregard s Army of Mississippi which had retreated into northern Mississippi Despite a more than 2 1 numerical advantage Halleck moved slowly However Buell was even slower and quickly caught the ire of Halleck During the march to Corinth Buell took extensive pauses to repair the railroad lines and would not entertain suggestions of allowing his army to live off the land To that end he court martialed Col John Turchin for allowing his soldiers to loot area homes This action was not popular either with Buell s troops or the War Department and President Lincoln ultimately overturned the verdict while Turchin eventually got promoted to brigadier general The Siege of Corinth ended in the Confederates abandoning the city on May 25 Afterwards Halleck split up the two armies and sent Buell eastward to capture Chattanooga while Grant remained in the Corinth area In July Halleck was summoned back to Washington to replace George McClellan as commander in chief of all Union armies thus effectively returning the two Western armies to independent action Buell s advance towards Chattanooga nearly rivaled the earlier march on Corinth for sluggishness with extensive pauses to stop and repair railroad lines When Nathan Bedford Forrest s cavalry then ransacked the Army of Ohio s supply lines Buell all but terminated the effort to take Chattanooga Thus after a busy winter and spring activity in the Western theater during the summer of 1862 almost completely ground to a halt On July 17 Buell was promoted to colonel in the regular army 8 The summer months were increasingly frustrating for the Army of the Ohio which was averaging barely a mile a day Bored soldiers took to uncontrollable looting of the countryside and harassment of slaves These infractions in their turn were punished harshly by Buell and by mid August morale in the army had almost collapsed Despite protests from the War Department to move faster Buell insisted that he could not hold Chattanooga for any length of time without proper caution and preparedness 9 Grant despite his professional rivalry following Shiloh addressed these charges against Buell in his memoirs writing General Buell was a brave intelligent officer with as much professional pride and ambition of a commendable sort as I ever knew He became an object of harsh criticism later some going so far as to challenge his loyalty No one who knew him ever believed him capable of a dishonorable act and nothing could be more dishonorable than to accept high rank and command in war and then betray the trust When I came into command of the army in 1864 I requested the Secretary of War to restore General Buell to duty The opportunity frequently occurred for me to defend General Buell against what I believed to be most unjust charges On one occasion a correspondent put in my mouth the very charge I had so often refuted of disloyalty This brought from General Buell a very severe retort which I saw in the New York World some time before I received the letter itself I could very well understand his grievance at seeing untrue and disgraceful charges apparently sustained by an officer who at the time was at the head of the army I replied to him but not through the press I kept no copy of my letter nor did I ever see it in print neither did I receive an answer 10 Kentucky Edit In September Confederate armies under Edmund Kirby Smith and Braxton Bragg invaded Kentucky and Buell was forced to take action Buell wired Halleck that he planned to march on Louisville but Halleck already frustrated with his glacial movements in Tennessee replied back that he did not care where Buell marched just as long as he was doing something to take the fight to the enemy The Kentucky campaign did have the effect of re energizing Buell s demoralized soldiers who were excited to finally be going somewhere and march into a state that had been mostly untouched by war Louisville was occupied by the Army of the Ohio on September 25 but despite learning that Bragg s army was in nearby Munfordville Buell convinced that he was outnumbered declined to pursue Bragg A single corps of Buell s army was attacked by Bragg at the Battle of Perryville on October 8 1862 while Buell a couple of miles behind the action was not aware that a battle was taking place until late in the day and thus did not effectively engage the full strength of his army to defeat the smaller enemy force Buell was urged by his officers to counterattack the next day but he refused on the grounds that he did not know exactly how many Confederates he was facing By morning Bragg ordered a retreat from the field Although Perryville was tactically indecisive it halted the Confederate invasion of Kentucky and forced their withdrawal back into Tennessee Although the battle ended with the Union army in possession of the field the Confederates had escaped to fight another day and Buell had not engaged most of his army in spite of having nearly 60 000 men to face a mere 16 000 Confederates Even some of Buell s own officers and enlisted men began suspecting him of disloyalty in part because he was one of a handful of Union generals to have owned slaves prior to the war An Indiana artillery officer wrote After Perryville I became convinced that the sooner Buell was relieved of command of the Army of the Ohio the better When President Lincoln urged an immediate pursuit of Bragg he was told by Buell that the route directly south from Perryville into Eastern Tennessee was rough wooded country with few roads and would be too difficult to maneuver through He said that the only sensible route was to go back west to Nashville then travel east across Tennessee to Chattanooga Halleck wired Buell telling him The president does not understand why we cannot march as the enemy marches live as he lives and fight as he fights unless we admit that there is some inherent defect in our generals and soldiers On October 24 Buell was relieved from command of the Army of the Ohio and replaced by Maj Gen William Rosecrans A military committee investigated Buell s conduct during and after Perryville but came to no conclusions and Buell considered his reputation vindicated as he did not compromise his principles in waging war 11 After his dismissal he was ordered to Indianapolis to await future assignments but none came When Grant was appointed general in chief of the army in March 1864 he offered Buell a possible assignment but he refused to serve under either Sherman or George Thomas on the grounds that he outranked both of them In his memoirs Grant called this the worst excuse a soldier can make for declining service On May 23 Buell s volunteer commission expired and he reverted to the regular army rank of colonel Unable to tolerate this demotion he resigned from the army on June 1 4 12 Later life and death EditFollowing the war Buell lived again in Indiana and then in Kentucky employed in the iron and coal industry as president of the Green River Iron Company He continued to be a target of criticism for his conduct during the war Although Buell did not write any memoirs he did produce a series of newspaper articles defending himself and criticizing Grant particularly for the events at Shiloh and Buell to his dying day maintained that he was the hero of the battle The death of his wife in 1881 was very hard on him and his final years were marked by poverty and ill health By 1898 he was an invalid and he died on November 19 He was buried in Bellefontaine Cemetery in St Louis Legacy EditBuell earned the nickname The McClellan of the West for his cautious approach and desire for a limited war that would not disrupt civilian life in the South or interfere with slavery Although he staunchly opposed secession he was never able to reconcile himself with the Lincoln administration Buell s wife had owned slaves prior to the war and their marriage although she freed them shortly after the Confederate attack on Fort Sumter Buell had no personal animosity towards slavery or the Southern way of life He continued to be highly regarded by fellow generals many of whom felt that the White House had been unjust towards him William T Sherman wrote to his brother John a Congressman You have driven off McClellan and is Burnside any better You have driven off Buell and is Rosecrans any better His harsh discipline and inability to relate to his soldiers on a personal level may have also contributed to his downfall Buell Armory on the University of Kentucky campus in Lexington Kentucky is named after Buell Buell Island in his hometown of Lowell is named after him His personal papers maps correspondence uniform West Point diploma and other possessions are held at the University of Notre Dame 13 See also Edit Biography portal American Civil War portalList of American Civil War generals Union Bibliography of Ulysses S Grant Bibliography of the American Civil WarReferences Edit Allan Nevins War for the Union 1960 vol 2 pp 288 89 citing also Lew Wallace a b Eicher p 152 a b Daniel 1997 pp 56 57 a b The Union Army A History of Military Affairs in the Loyal States 1861 65 Volume VIII Madison Wisc Federal Publishing Co 1908 p 41 Daniel 1997 p 249 Daniel 1997 pp 265 266 293 293 306 Buell Shiloh Reviewed p 536 Noe p 20 Emerson pp 121 31 Grimsley p 85 Grant vol 1 pp 295 96 Noe pp 339 43 Grant vol 2 p 121 Humanities National Endowment for the 1917 12 22 The Irish standard volume Minneapolis Minn 1886 1920 December 22 1917 Image 1 The Irish Standard ISSN 2475 2894 Retrieved 2021 04 25 Bibliography Edit Buell Don Carlos Shiloh Reviewed In Battles and Leaders of the Civil War vol 1 edited by Robert Underwood Johnson and Clarence C Buel New York Century Co 1884 1888 OCLC 2048818 Daniel Larry J 1997 Shiloh The Battle That Changed the Civil War New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 0 684 80375 5 Eicher John H and David J Eicher Civil War High Commands Stanford CA Stanford University Press 2001 ISBN 0 8047 3641 3 Emerson Col John W Grant s Life in the West and His Mississippi Valley Campaigns Midland Monthly 10 1898 Grant Ulysses S Personal Memoirs of U S Grant 2 vols Charles L Webster amp Company 1885 86 ISBN 0 914427 67 9 Grimsley Mark The Hard Hand of War New York Cambridge University Press 1995 ISBN 0 521 59941 5 Noe Kenneth W Perryville This Grand Havoc of Battle Lexington University Press of Kentucky 2001 ISBN 978 0 8131 2209 0 United States Works Progress Administration Ohio Williams History of Washington County Ohio 1788 1881 Cleveland Ohio H Z Williams amp Brother 1881 Further reading EditEngle Stephen Douglas Don Carlos Buell Most Promising of All Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press 1999 ISBN 0 8078 2512 3 External links Edit Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Buell Don Carlos Civil War Home Don Carlos Buell Military biography of Don Carlos Buell from the Cullum biographies Don Carlos Buell Find a Grave Retrieved August 17 2010 Military officesPreceded bynone Commander of the Army of the OhioNovember 9 1861 October 24 1862 Succeeded byWilliam S Rosecrans renamed Army of the Cumberland Category American slave owner Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Don Carlos Buell amp oldid 1136414655, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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