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George H. Steuart (militia general)

George Hume Steuart (1790–1867) was a United States general who fought during the War of 1812, and later joined the Confederate States of America during the Civil War. His military career began in 1814 when, as a captain, he raised a company of Maryland volunteers, leading them at both the Battle of Bladensberg and the Battle of North Point, where he was wounded. After the war he rose to become major general and commander-in-chief of the First Light Division, Maryland Militia.

George Hume Steuart
Major General George H. Steuart reviews the Maryland Militia at Camp Frederick, 1843
Born(1790-11-01)November 1, 1790
Anne Arundel County, Maryland
DiedOctober 21, 1867(1867-10-21) (aged 76)
Baltimore, Maryland
Place of burial
Green Mount Cemetery, Baltimore, Maryland
Allegiance United States of America
 Confederate States of America
Service/branch United States Army
 Confederate States Army
Years of service1814-1861
Rank Major General (United States)
Commands held5th Maryland Regiment, Maryland Militia
Battles/warsWar of 1812

American Civil War

RelationsGeorge H. Steuart (grandfather)
George H. Steuart (son)
William Steuart (uncle)
Richard Sprigg Steuart (brother)
Other workplanter, politician, lawyer

During John Brown's raid on Harpers Ferry in 1859, Steuart personally led a detachment of militia, and, as the prospect of civil war drew closer, he was among those who lobbied unsuccessfully for Maryland to secede from the Union. In 1861, at the start of the Civil War, Steuart left his home state of Maryland and joined the Confederacy, though at 71 years of age he was by then considered too old for active service. This did not prevent him from personally riding with Lee's army and even being captured at the First Battle of Manassas.

He is sometimes confused with his eldest son, Brigadier General George H. Steuart, who fought for the Confederacy at a number of major battles, eventually surrendering with General Robert E. Lee at Appomattox in 1865. Steuart died in 1867, his health and fortune ruined by his devotion to the Southern "lost cause".

Early life edit

 
Maryland Square, later known as Steuart Hall, c1868

Steuart was born in Anne Arundel County, Maryland, on November 1, 1790, the eldest son of Dr James Steuart of Annapolis [1](1755–1846), and Rebecca Sprigg, who were married on November 4, 1788.[2] James Steuart was a physician who served in the Revolutionary War, and was the son of George Hume Steuart (1700–1784), a Loyalist politician and tobacco planter who was colonel of the Maryland horse militia under Governor Horatio Sharpe.[3]

The young Steuart grew up partly at Sparrow's Point, his family's plantation in the Chesapeake Bay, and partly at their residence in West Baltimore, a substantial estate known as Maryland Square. Later he studied at and graduated from Princeton University.[4] Steuart also had a younger brother, Richard Sprigg Steuart, who grew up to become a physician and was an early pioneer of the treatment of mental illness.[5]

War of 1812 - Bladensburg and North Point edit

 
The Battle of North Point, by Thomas Ruckle, a corporal who served in Steuart's company, the Washington Blues.

When war broke out between the United States and Great Britain, Steuart (then Captain Steuart) raised a company of Maryland volunteers, known as the Washington Blues,[6] part of the 5th Maryland Regiment[7] commanded by Lieutenant Colonel Joseph Sterett.[8] They saw action at the Battle of Bladensburg (August 24, 1814),[9] where the Americans, including the 5th Regiment, were routed by the British. Although the 5th had "evinced a disposition to make a gallant resistance", it was flanked by the redcoats and forced to retreat in some disorder.[10] After the battle, British forces entered Washington, D.C., and set fire to a number of buildings in the city.

Steuart's regiment fought better at the Battle of North Point (September 12, 1814),[1] where the militia were able to hold the line for an hour or so before making a fighting retreat during which Steuart was wounded.[11][12] Some of the militia regiments, such as the 51st, and some members of 39th, broke and ran under fire, but the 5th and 27th held their ground and were able to retreat in reasonably good order having inflicted significant casualties on the advancing enemy.[13] Corporal John McHenry of the 5th Regiment wrote an account of the battle:

"Our Regiment, the 5th, carried off the praise from the other regiments engaged, so did the company to which I have the honor to belong cover itself with glory. When compared to the [other] Regiments we were the last that left the ground...had our Regiment not retreated at the time it did we should have been cut off in two minutes."[13]

Although North Point was a tactical defeat for the Americans, it would prove a turning point in the War of 1812. The British took significant losses, including their commanding officer Major General Robert Ross, and, lacking the strength to take the city of Baltimore, they eventually withdrew.

Post-war career edit

Steuart was soon promoted to lieutenant-colonel of the 5th Regiment,[14] and after the war he trained as a lawyer, being listed in the Baltimore City Directory of 1816 as Attorney-at-Law.[1] He was a member of the Maryland House of Delegates for Baltimore in 1827 and 1828, serving two one-year terms,[15] and in 1835 he stood unsuccessfully for election to Maryland's 4th congressional district, running as an independent candidate.[16] In around 1827 or 1828 his portrait was painted by the Baltimore portrait painter Philip Tilyard.[17]

First Light Division formed edit

 
Steuart's Baltimore City Guards march through Charleston in 1859, wearing bearskins "taller than the Grenadier Guards".[18]
 
The Boston Greys encamped in Baltimore, July 1844. Steuart's residence can be seen on the right hand side.

In 1833 a number of Baltimore regiments were formed into a brigade, and Steuart was promoted from colonel to brigadier general.[19] From 1841 to 1861 he was Commander of the First Light Division, Maryland Volunteer Militia.[20][21] Until the Civil War he would be the Commander-in-Chief of the Maryland Volunteers.[22][23] The First Light Division comprised two brigades: the 1st Light Brigade and the 2nd Brigade. The First Brigade consisted of the 1st Cavalry, 1st Artillery, and 5th Infantry regiments. The 2nd Brigade was composed of the 1st Rifle Regiment and the 53rd Infantry Regiment, and the Battalion of Baltimore City Guards.[18]

In 1843 Steuart reviewed his troops and those of a visiting regiment from Pennsylvania at Camp Frederick, accompanied by Governor David R. Porter of Pennsylvania and various senior officers. The event was attended by "an immense concourse of spectators",[23] and was commemorated in a lithograph published in the same year.

On July 19, 1844, the Boston City Greys visited Baltimore, and marched in parade with various companies of the 53rd Regiment. Steuart hosted a party for the visiting militia, which was held at his family estate in West Baltimore, known as Maryland Square. The event was celebrated by extensive coverage in the Baltimore American and, like the previous year's visit from Pennsylvania, was commemorated in a lithograph.[24]

Steuart also appears to have formed an acquaintance with the social reformer Dorothea Dix, who in July 1850 was his guest at Steuart's country residence Sparrow's Point on the Chesapeake Bay. Also a guest was the Swedish feminist and activist Fredrika Bremer, who wrote in a letter to her sister Agathe: "Late in the evening I sat in the most beautiful moonlight with Miss Dix on the veranda of General Stuarts' [sic] house, looking towards the shining river and the wide Chesapeake Bay, listening to the story of her simple yet remarkable life".[25] Dix was a campaigner for better treatment of the mentally ill, a subject which was also the life's work of Steuart's brother, the physician Richard Sprigg Steuart. Also among Steuart's social circle was the writer Washington Irving, who was a regular guest at Maryland Square.[26]

Know-Nothing elections edit

 
Flag of the Know-Nothing, or American party.
 
Baltimore mayor Thomas Swann persuaded Governor Thomas W. Ligon to stand down Steuart's militia during the 1857 elections.

During the mid-1850s public order in Baltimore was threatened by the election of candidates of the Know Nothing party.[27] In October 1856 the Know Nothing Mayor Samuel Hinks was pressed by Baltimorians to order Steuart's militia in readiness to maintain order during the mayoral elections, as violence was anticipated. Hinks duly gave Steuart the order, writing that he should "hold yourself with your command, or such portion thereof as you may deem necessary, in readiness to march at a moment's warning, fully armed and equipped for active service".[28] In response, Steuart ordered his men to "assemble in marching order" on November 4 and await further orders.[28] However, perhaps fearful of greater violence, the mayor soon rescinded his order.[29] On October 31 he met with Steuart and requested that the general make his soldiers ready, but not assembled, and Steuart duly countermanded his original order.[28] On polling day violence soon broke out, with shots exchanged by competing mobs.[29] In the 2nd and 8th wards several citizens were killed, and many wounded.[30] In the 6th ward artillery was used, and a pitched battle fought on Orleans St between Know Nothings and rival Democrats, raging for several hours.[30] The result of the election, in which voter fraud was widespread, was a victory for the Know Nothings by around 9,000 votes.[30]

In 1857, fearing similar violence at the upcoming elections, Governor Thomas W. Ligon ordered Steuart to hold the First Light Division, Maryland Volunteers in readiness.[31] Ligon carried a "painful sense of duty unfulfilled" owing to the violence of the previous year, and was determined to maintain order.[32] However, Mayor Thomas Swann successfully argued for a compromise measure involving special police forces to prevent disorder, and Ligon once again balked at the use of military force. He did not formally rescind the order to Steuart's militia, but rather proclaimed that he did not "contemplate the use, upon that day of the military force which I have ordered to be enrolled and organized."[31][32] This time, although there was somewhat less violence than in 1856, the results of the vote were again compromised by the use of force and intimidation. Mayor Swann was duly re-elected, albeit in a heavily disputed ballot.[31]

Slavery and the coming of the Civil War edit

 
Communiqué from a Citizen of Maryland in The Liberator issue of September 26, 1845 mentions Dr. and Gen. Stewart, and Hope H. Slatter

Steuart's family were slaveholders and strong supporters of the South's "peculiar institution", although they supported the gradual abolition of slavery by voluntary means. In 1828 Steuart served on the board of managers of the Maryland State Colonization Society, of which Charles Carroll of Carrollton, one of the co-signers of the Declaration of Independence, was president. Steuart's father, James Steuart, was vice-president, and his brother Richard Sprigg Steuart was also on the board of managers.[33] The MSCS was a branch of the American Colonization Society, an organization dedicated to returning black Americans to lead free lives in African states such as Liberia. The society proposed from the outset "to be a remedy for slavery", and declared in 1833:

"Resolved, That this society believe, and act upon the belief, that colonization tends to promote emancipation, by affording the emancipated slave a home where he can be happier than in this country, and so inducing masters to manumit who would not do so unconditionally...[so that] at a time not remote, slavery would cease in the state by the full consent of those interested."[34]

In around 1842 Steuart inherited from his uncle William Steuart (1754–1838) "2,000 acres, in several tracts of land, the best of which was Mount Steuart; and 125 slaves", becoming himself a substantial landowner and slaveholder.[35] In 1846 his father James Steuart died, and he inherited Maryland Square, his family's mansion in the western suburbs of Baltimore.[36]

John Brown's raid on Harper's Ferry edit

 
Suppression of John Brown's raid on Harpers Ferry.

In 1859 Steuart's militia participated in the suppression of John Brown's raid on Harpers Ferry, an abortive attempt to ignite a slave rebellion.[22] Steuart personally led six companies of Militia: the City Guard, Law Greys and Shields Guard from Baltimore, and the United Guards, Junior Defenders and Independent Riflemen from the city of Frederick.[18] The departing Baltimore militia were cheered on by substantial crowds of citizens and well-wishers.[37] After Harper's Ferry, militias in the South began to grow in importance as Southerners began to fear slave rebellion inspired by Northern Abolitionists.[38]

The following year, in a letter to the National Intelligencer on November 19, 1860, Steuart congratulated the editors on their support for the Fugitive Slave Acts, and set out his own support for the Supreme Court's 1857 decision to uphold slavery in the case of Dred Scott v. Sandford. He also criticized the recent election of then President-elect Abraham Lincoln on a platform opposed to slavery. Steuart argued for "the invalidity of Lincoln's election, because of the negro votes cast and counted for him in the states of New York, Ohio, and Massachusetts".[39]

In 1861, as war grew closer, Steuart established a family trust, administered by four of his sons, in order to look after his large family. The trust income consisted chiefly of ground rents from his estates.[40]

Civil War edit

 
Steuart's son, Brig. Gen. George H. "Maryland" Steuart.
 
Engraving of the Baltimore riot of 1861.

By April 1861 it had become clear that war was inevitable. On April 16 Steuart's eldest son, George H. Steuart, then an officer in the United States Army, resigned his captain's commission to join the Confederacy.[41] On April 19 Baltimore was disrupted by riots, during which Southern sympathizers attacked Union troops passing through the city by rail, causing what were arguably the first casualties of the Civil War. Steuart ordered his militia to assemble, armed and uniformed, to repel the Federal soldiers,[22] as Steuart himself was strongly sympathetic to the Confederacy, along with most of his senior officers. It is possible that he may even have contemplated an invasion of Washington DC.[42] Perhaps knowing this, and no doubt aware that public opinion in Baltimore was divided, Governor Thomas Holliday Hicks refused to order out the militia.[43] Steuart's eldest son commanded one of the city militias during the disturbances of April 1861 and, in a letter to his father, the younger Steuart wrote:

"I found nothing but disgust in my observations along the route and in the place I came to – a large majority of the population are insane on the one idea of loyalty to the Union and the legislature is so diminished and unreliable that I rejoiced to hear that they intended to adjourn...it seems that we are doomed to be trodden on by these troops who have taken military possession of our State, and seem determined to commit all the outrages of an invading army."[44]

Steuart's brother, the physician Richard Sprigg Steuart, was also in Baltimore during the riots and he held a somewhat different view of the state of public opinion in the city:

"I happened to be in Baltimore on the night of the 19th April 1861, and witnessed the outburst of feeling on the part of the people. Generally, when the Massachusetts troops were passing thru the city of Baltimore, it was evident to me that 75 p.c. of the population was in favour of repelling these troops. Instinctively the people seemed to look upon them as intruders, or as invaders of the South, not as defenders of the City of Baltimore. How or by whom the first blow was given can not be now ascertained, but the feeling of resistance was contagious and powerful. The Mayor of the City, nevertheless, though it his duty to keep the peace and protect these troops in their passage thru Baltimore."[45]

Steuart and his son made strenuous efforts to persuade Marylanders to secede from the Union, and to use the militia to prevent the occupation of the State by Union soldiers. But by April 25 his efforts had become largely defensive. In a letter of the same date he wrote to Governor of Virginia John Letcher stating that he was:

"very anxious to hold a strong position at or near the Relay House so as to guard and keep open [railway communications] and at the same time cutting it off from Washington"[46]

Steuart's efforts to persuade Maryland to secede from the Union were in vain. On April 29, the Maryland Legislature voted 53–13 against secession. and the state was swiftly occupied by Union soldiers to prevent any reconsideration.

Flight to Virginia edit

 
Jarvis Hospital was built on the grounds of Maryland Square (visible bottom right) at the outbreak of the Civil War.

The political situation remained uncertain until May 13, 1861, when Union troops occupied the state, restoring order and preventing any further move to secession, and by late summer Maryland was firmly in the hands of Union soldiers. Arrests of Confederate sympathizers soon followed, and General Steuart fled to Charlottesville, Virginia, after which much of his family's property was confiscated by the Federal Government.[47] Maryland Square was seized by the Union Army and re-named Camp Andrew after Massachusetts Governor John Albion Andrew, a noted abolitionist.[48] Union troops were quartered in Steuart's mansion and Jarvis Hospital was soon erected on the grounds of the estate, to care for Federal wounded.[49]

Steuart was not alone in fleeing to Virginia to join the Confederacy. Many members of the newly formed Maryland Line in the Confederate army would be drawn from Steuart's Maryland militia,[50] though at age 71 Steuart was personally judged too old for active service. Despite this, he spent much of the war following the Confederate army and was present at or near a number of battles,[51] including Gettysburg,[52] and the First Battle of Manassas, where he was so close to the fighting that he was actually captured by Union forces. Fortunately, when it was discovered he was not a serving officer in the Confederate army he was soon released.[53]

The cost of war edit

Steuart is often confused with his eldest son, Brigadier General George H. Steuart,[54] who rose rapidly in the Confederate command, distinguishing himself at the First Battle of Manassas and fighting for the South at many battles including Cross Keys, Winchester and Gettysburg. Wounded, captured and exchanged, the younger Steuart would eventually surrender with General Lee at Appomattox. Local residents in Baltimore would come to know father and son as "The Old General" and "The Young General".[55]

Steuart's third son, Lieutenant William James Steuart (1832–1864), also fought for the Confederacy. During the Battle of the Wilderness he was severely wounded in the hip, and was sent to Guinea station, a hospital for officers in Richmond, Virginia. There, on 21 May 1864, he died.[56] A friend of general Steuart at the University of Virginia wrote to his bereaved father:

"You will not charge me, I trust, with intruding on the sacredness of your grief, if I cannot help giving expression to my deep, heartfelt sympathy with your great sorrow. You have sacrificed so much for the righteous cause already, that I know you will present this last and most precious offering also with the fortitude of your character and the submission of a Christian. Still, I know how valuable this son of yours had been to your interests, how dear to your heart, and I cannot tell you, with what deep and sincere grief I heard of your terrible loss."[57]

Steuart's brother, the physician Richard Sprigg Steuart, chose not to leave Maryland, remaining in his home state throughout the war, though his open support for the Confederacy meant that he too became a fugitive from the federal authorities. Baltimore resident W W Glenn described him as living in constant fear of capture:

"I was spending the evening out when a footstep approached my chair from behind and a hand was laid upon me. I turned and saw Dr. R. S. Steuart. He has been concealed for more than six months. His neighbors are so bitter against him that he dare not go home, and he committed himself so decidedly on the 19th April and is known to be so decided a Southerner, that it more than likely he would be thrown into a Fort. He goes about from place to place, sometimes staying in one county, sometimes in another and then passing a few days in the city. He never shows in the day time & is cautious who sees him at any time. He has several negroes in his confidence at different places."[58]

General Steuart corresponded regularly with a friend, Sally J. Newman, in Hilton, Va. during course of the war. In these letters, which are held by the Maryland Historical Society, Steuart deplores Negro suffrage and the general condition of the country.[40]

After the war edit

Steuart's dedication to the "Lost Cause" of the Confederacy would prove a disaster for him and his family. Although Maryland Square was restored to him after the war, neither he nor his children would live there again.[59] Jarvis hospital was closed in 1865, at the war's end, and in the summer of 1866 the buildings were auctioned off, permitting successful bidders 10 days from the date of auction in which to remove their purchases from the grounds.[60]

After the war Steuart travelled to Europe, but returned to Maryland in 1867,[51] where he died on October 21, 1867, age 77. He is buried at Greenmount Cemetery, Maryland, along with his wife, eldest son and other members of his family.[61]

Family life edit

 
Headstone marking the grave of George H Steuart "Major General Maryland Volunteers", his wife Anne Jane, and other members of his family. Greenmount Cemetery, Baltimore.

Steuart married Ann-Jane Edmondson in Baltimore on May 3, 1836. They had 10 children:

  • George H. Steuart (1828–1903), Confederate brigadier general during the American Civil War.
  • Isaac Edmondson Steuart (1830–1891). Suffered from mental illness and was "in and out of mental institutions" for much of his life.[40]
  • Lieutenant William James Steuart (1832–1864), C.S.A. Killed at the Battle of the Wilderness, 1864.[56]
  • Thomas Edmondson Steuart (1834–1866)
  • Dr James Henry Steuart (1835–1892)
  • Mary Elizabeth Steuart (1837–1840)
  • Ann Rebecca Steuart (1839–1865)
  • Charles David Steuart (1841–1921). Like his older brother Isaac, suffered from mental illness and was "in and out of mental institutions" for much of his life.[40]
  • Margaret Sophia Steuart (1843–1860)
  • Henrietta Elizabeth Steuart (1846–1867)[62]

Legacy edit

Perhaps not surprisingly, as Maryland had remained loyal to the Union, there is no monument to Steuart in his home state. Maryland Square was demolished in 1884, and little trace of his mansion, or Jarvis Hospital, remains today. However, in 1919 the Sisters of Bon Secours themselves opened a hospital, their first in the United States, at 2000 West Baltimore Street, very near the location of the former Jarvis Hospital.[63] The Grace Medical Center continues to flourish today, and forms an important part of the modern neighbourhood, which still retains the name of Steuart Hill.[59][64]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c The Huntington Library quarterly. 1949.
  2. ^ Brumbaugh, Gaius Marcus, p.473, Maryland Records: Colonial, Revolutionary, County, and Church Retrieved January 2012
  3. ^ Nelker, p.66
  4. ^ Harrison, Bruce, p.937 The Family Forest Descendants of Lady Joan Beaufort[permanent dead link] Retrieved August 28, 2010
  5. ^ Richard Sprigg Steuart and the History of Spring Grove Hospital 2010-01-26 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved Jan 13 2010
  6. ^ Register of the Military Order of Foreign Wars of the United States, National Commandery (1900) Retrieved Jan 14 2010
  7. ^ Register of the Military Order of Foreign Wars of the United States, p.101, National Commandery (1900) Retrieved Jan 14 2010
  8. ^ Hickman, Nathaniel, p.100, The citizen soldiers at North Point and Fort McHenry, September 12 & 13 1814, published by James Young,(1889) Retrieved Jan 14 2010
  9. ^ *Marine, William Matthew, p.326, The British Invasion of Maryland, 1812-1815 Retrieved Jan 14 2010
  10. ^ Brackenridge, Henry Marie, p.249, History of the Late War between the United States and Great Britain, Philadelphia (1836). Retrieved Jan 15 2010
  11. ^ Richardson, p.228
  12. ^ American Quarterly Review, Issues 35-36, by Robert Walsh, p.495 (1835) Retrieved Jan 15 2010
  13. ^ a b George, p.143
  14. ^ Niles' Weekly Register, Volume 14, by Hezekiah Niles (1818) Retrieved Jan 15 2010
  15. ^ Archives of Maryland House of Delegates, Baltimore (1790–1864) Retrieved Jan 13 2010
  16. ^ Extra Globe dated Wednesday October 7 1835 Retrieved Jan 15 2010
  17. ^ www.tilyard.net Retrieved April 2013
  18. ^ a b c Field, Ron, et al., p.33, The Confederate Army 1861-65: Missouri, Kentucky & Maryland[permanent dead link] Osprey Publishing (2008), Retrieved May 10, 2010
  19. ^ Griffith, Thomas W., p.257, Annals of Baltimore, 1833 Retrieved February 28, 2010
  20. ^ Sullivan David M., The United States Marine Corps in the Civil War: The First Year, p.286, White Mane Publishing (1997). Retrieved Jan 13 2010
  21. ^ Sparks, Jared, and others, p.168, The American Almanac and Repository of Useful Knowledge, Volume 10 Retrieved August 29, 2010
  22. ^ a b c Hartzler, Daniel D., p.13, A Band of Brothers: Photographic Epilogue to Marylanders in the Confederacy Retrieved March 1, 2010
  23. ^ a b Niles Weekly register, Volume 62, p.177 Retrieved March 2, 2010
  24. ^ Rice, p.119
  25. ^ Sjoberg, Leif, American Swedish (1973) Retrieved January 2012
  26. ^ Richardson, p.226
  27. ^ Andrews, p.475
  28. ^ a b c Melton, p.103
  29. ^ a b Andrews, p.476
  30. ^ a b c Andrews, p.477
  31. ^ a b c Andrews, p.478
  32. ^ a b Melton, p.159
  33. ^ The African Repository, Volume 3, 1827, p.251, edited by Ralph Randolph Gurley Retrieved Jan 15 2010
  34. ^ Stebbins, Giles B., Facts and Opinions Touching the Real Origin, Character, and Influence of the American Colonization Society: Views of Wilberforce, Clarkson, and Others, published by Jewitt, Proctor, and Worthington (1853). Retrieved February 16, 2010.
  35. ^ Nelker, p.131, Memoirs of Richard Sprigg Steuart.
  36. ^ Nelker, p.107
  37. ^ Andrews, p.497
  38. ^ Ken Burns, The American Civil War
  39. ^ Letter from George H. Steuart to the National Intelligencer dated November 19, 1860, unpublished.
  40. ^ a b c d archive of the Maryland Historical Society Retrieved Jan 13 2010
  41. ^ Cullum, George Washington, p.226, Biographical Register of the Officers and Graduates of the U.S. Military Retrieved Jan 16 2010
  42. ^ Lockwood, p.279 Retrieved June 2012
  43. ^ Brugger, Robert J., p.285, Maryland, A Middle Temperament: 1634-1980, Johns Hopkins University Press (1996) Retrieved Jan 15 2010
  44. ^ Mitchell, Charles W., p.102, Maryland Voices of the Civil War. Retrieved February 26, 2010
  45. ^ Mitchell, Charles W., p.101, Maryland voices of the Civil War. Retrieved February 26, 2010
  46. ^ Lockwood & Lockwood, p.210, The Siege of Washington: The Untold Story of the Twelve Days That Shook the Nation Retrieved June 2012
  47. ^ Brugger, Robert J., p.280, Maryland, A Middle Temperament: 1634-1980 Retrieved Feb 28 2010
  48. ^ Mitchell, p.166
  49. ^ Nelker, p.120
  50. ^ Goldsborough, p.9
  51. ^ a b Hanson, p.272
  52. ^ The English Confederate - The Life Of A Civil War General, 1815-1889, by Collett Leventhorpe, p.110. Retrieved Jan 13 2010
  53. ^ Scharf, John Thomas, p.668, The Chronicles of Baltimore Retrieved February 28, 2010
  54. ^ Sjoberg, Leif, p.69, American Swedish (1973) Retrieved February 2011
  55. ^ Steuart, William Calvert, "The Steuart Hill Area's Colorful Past", Sunday Sun Magazine, February 10, 1963.
  56. ^ a b Nelker, p.67
  57. ^ Mitchell, p.339
  58. ^ Mitchell, Charles W., p.285, Maryland Voices of the Civil War Retrieved February 26, 2010
  59. ^ a b Rice, p.290
  60. ^ Rice, p.256
  61. ^ Greenmount Cemetery website Retrieved Jan 13 2010
  62. ^ Nelker, p.67-68
  63. ^ History of Bon Secours Hospital, Baltimore 2010-04-12 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved Feb 7 2010
  64. ^ Steuart, William Calvert, Article in Sunday Sun Magazine, "The Steuart Hill Area's Colorful Past", Baltimore, February 10, 1963

References edit

  • Andrews, Matthew Page, History of Maryland, Doubleday Doran & Co, New York City (1929).
  • Brackenridge, Henry Marie, p.249, History of the Late War between the United States and Great Britain, Philadelphia (1836). Retrieved Jan 15 2010
  • Field, Ron, et al., The Confederate Army 1861-65: Missouri, Kentucky & Maryland[permanent dead link] Osprey Publishing (2008), Retrieved March 4, 2010
  • George, Christopher T Terror on the Chesapeake, The War of 1812 on the Bay, White Mane Books (2000).
  • Goldsborough, W. W., The Maryland Line in the Confederate Army, Guggenheimer Weil & Co (1900), ISBN 0-913419-00-1.
  • Gurley, Ralph Randolph, Ed., p.251, The African Repository, Volume 3 (1827). Retrieved Jan 15 2010
  • Hanson, George Adolphus, Old Kent: The Eastern Shore of Maryland: Notes Illustrative of the Most Ancient Records Of Kent County, Maryland Published by John P. Des Forges (1876), ASIN: B0013KKEXE. Retrieved on Jan 11 2011
  • Harrison, Bruce, The Family Forest Descendants of Lady Joan Beaufort[permanent dead link] Retrieved August 28, 2010
  • Hickey, Donald R., The War of 1812, a Forgotten Conflict, University of Illinois Press (October 1, 1990) ISBN 0-252-06059-8 Retrieved January 11, 2010
  • Hickman, Nathaniel, p.100, The Citizen Soldiers at North Point and Fort McHenry, September 12 & 13 1814, published by James Young (1889). Retrieved Jan 14 2010
  • Leventhorpe, Collett, p.110, The English Confederate - The Life Of A Civil War General, 1815-1889 McFarland & Company (2006) Retrieved Jan 11 2010
  • Marine, William Matthew, The British Invasion of Maryland, 1812-1815 Nabu Press (2010) ISBN 1-176-49230-6 Retrieved Jan 14 2010
  • Melton, Tracy Matthew, Hanging Henry Gambrill - The Violent Career of Baltimore's Plug Uglies, Maryland Historical Society, Baltimore (2005) ISBN 0-938420-93-3
  • Mitchell, C. W., Maryland Voices of the Civil War, Johns Hopkins University Press (2007)
  • Nelker, Gladys P., The Clan Steuart, Genealogical Publishing (1970).
  • Papenfuse, Edward C. et al., Archives of Maryland, Historical List, new series, Vol. 1. Annapolis, MD: Maryland State Archives (1990).
  • Richardson. Hester Dorey, Side-Lights on Maryland History: With Sketches of Early Maryland Families, Tidewater Publishing, 1967. ASIN: B00146BDXW, ISBN 0-8063-0296-8, ISBN 978-0-8063-0296-6.
  • Shirk, Ida M., p.160, Descendants of Richard & Elizabeth (Ewen) Talbott of Popular Knowle Retrieved January 2012
  • Sjoberg, Leif, American Swedish (1973) Retrieved February 2011
  • Sparks, Jared, and others, p.168, The American Almanac and Repository of Useful Knowledge, Volume 10 Retrieved August 29, 2010
  • Steuart, George H., Letter to the National Intelligencer dated November 19, 1860, unpublished, Archive of the Maryland Historical Society.
  • Steuart, James, Papers, Maryland Historical Society, unpublished.
  • Steuart, William Calvert, Article in Sunday Sun Magazine, "The Steuart Hill Area's Colorful Past", Baltimore, February 10, 1963.
  • Sullivan, David M., The United States Marine Corps in the Civil War: The First Year, White Mane Publishing, (1997) Retrieved Jan 13 2010
  • White, Roger B, Article in The Maryland Gazette, "Steuart, Only Anne Arundel Rebel General", November 13, 1969.

External links edit

  • Grave of Major General George H. Steuart at www.greenmountcemetery.com 2010-01-27 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on Jan 11 2010
  • Archives of Maryland Historical List House of Delegates, Baltimore City (1790–1864) Retrieved on Jan 11 2010
  • Letters of Major General George H. Steuart from the Archive of the Maryland Historical Society Retrieved on Jan 11 2010
  • Retrieved on Jan 11 2010
  • The Huntingdon Library Quarterly, Volume 12 (1949). Retrieved Jan 13 2010
  • Register of the Military Order of Foreign Wars of the United States, National Commandery (1900) Retrieved Jan 14 2010
  • Extra Globe dated Wednesday October 7 1835 Retrieved Jan 15 2010

george, steuart, militia, general, information, about, other, persons, with, namegeorge, steuart, george, steuart, george, hume, steuart, 1790, 1867, united, states, general, fought, during, 1812, later, joined, confederate, states, america, during, civil, mil. For information about other persons with the nameGeorge H Steuart see George H Steuart George Hume Steuart 1790 1867 was a United States general who fought during the War of 1812 and later joined the Confederate States of America during the Civil War His military career began in 1814 when as a captain he raised a company of Maryland volunteers leading them at both the Battle of Bladensberg and the Battle of North Point where he was wounded After the war he rose to become major general and commander in chief of the First Light Division Maryland Militia George Hume SteuartMajor General George H Steuart reviews the Maryland Militia at Camp Frederick 1843Born 1790 11 01 November 1 1790Anne Arundel County MarylandDiedOctober 21 1867 1867 10 21 aged 76 Baltimore MarylandPlace of burialGreen Mount Cemetery Baltimore MarylandAllegiance United States of America Confederate States of AmericaService wbr branch United States Army Confederate States Army Maryland MilitiaYears of service1814 1861RankMajor General United States Commands held5th Maryland Regiment Maryland MilitiaBattles warsWar of 1812 Battle of Bladensberg Battle of North Point American Civil War First Battle of ManassasRelationsGeorge H Steuart grandfather George H Steuart son William Steuart uncle Richard Sprigg Steuart brother Other workplanter politician lawyer During John Brown s raid on Harpers Ferry in 1859 Steuart personally led a detachment of militia and as the prospect of civil war drew closer he was among those who lobbied unsuccessfully for Maryland to secede from the Union In 1861 at the start of the Civil War Steuart left his home state of Maryland and joined the Confederacy though at 71 years of age he was by then considered too old for active service This did not prevent him from personally riding with Lee s army and even being captured at the First Battle of Manassas He is sometimes confused with his eldest son Brigadier General George H Steuart who fought for the Confederacy at a number of major battles eventually surrendering with General Robert E Lee at Appomattox in 1865 Steuart died in 1867 his health and fortune ruined by his devotion to the Southern lost cause Contents 1 Early life 2 War of 1812 Bladensburg and North Point 3 Post war career 3 1 First Light Division formed 3 2 Know Nothing elections 4 Slavery and the coming of the Civil War 5 John Brown s raid on Harper s Ferry 6 Civil War 6 1 Flight to Virginia 6 2 The cost of war 7 After the war 8 Family life 9 Legacy 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 External linksEarly life edit nbsp Maryland Square later known as Steuart Hall c1868 Steuart was born in Anne Arundel County Maryland on November 1 1790 the eldest son of Dr James Steuart of Annapolis 1 1755 1846 and Rebecca Sprigg who were married on November 4 1788 2 James Steuart was a physician who served in the Revolutionary War and was the son of George Hume Steuart 1700 1784 a Loyalist politician and tobacco planter who was colonel of the Maryland horse militia under Governor Horatio Sharpe 3 The young Steuart grew up partly at Sparrow s Point his family s plantation in the Chesapeake Bay and partly at their residence in West Baltimore a substantial estate known as Maryland Square Later he studied at and graduated from Princeton University 4 Steuart also had a younger brother Richard Sprigg Steuart who grew up to become a physician and was an early pioneer of the treatment of mental illness 5 War of 1812 Bladensburg and North Point edit nbsp The Battle of North Point by Thomas Ruckle a corporal who served in Steuart s company the Washington Blues When war broke out between the United States and Great Britain Steuart then Captain Steuart raised a company of Maryland volunteers known as the Washington Blues 6 part of the 5th Maryland Regiment 7 commanded by Lieutenant Colonel Joseph Sterett 8 They saw action at the Battle of Bladensburg August 24 1814 9 where the Americans including the 5th Regiment were routed by the British Although the 5th had evinced a disposition to make a gallant resistance it was flanked by the redcoats and forced to retreat in some disorder 10 After the battle British forces entered Washington D C and set fire to a number of buildings in the city Steuart s regiment fought better at the Battle of North Point September 12 1814 1 where the militia were able to hold the line for an hour or so before making a fighting retreat during which Steuart was wounded 11 12 Some of the militia regiments such as the 51st and some members of 39th broke and ran under fire but the 5th and 27th held their ground and were able to retreat in reasonably good order having inflicted significant casualties on the advancing enemy 13 Corporal John McHenry of the 5th Regiment wrote an account of the battle Our Regiment the 5th carried off the praise from the other regiments engaged so did the company to which I have the honor to belong cover itself with glory When compared to the other Regiments we were the last that left the ground had our Regiment not retreated at the time it did we should have been cut off in two minutes 13 Although North Point was a tactical defeat for the Americans it would prove a turning point in the War of 1812 The British took significant losses including their commanding officer Major General Robert Ross and lacking the strength to take the city of Baltimore they eventually withdrew Post war career editSteuart was soon promoted to lieutenant colonel of the 5th Regiment 14 and after the war he trained as a lawyer being listed in the Baltimore City Directory of 1816 as Attorney at Law 1 He was a member of the Maryland House of Delegates for Baltimore in 1827 and 1828 serving two one year terms 15 and in 1835 he stood unsuccessfully for election to Maryland s 4th congressional district running as an independent candidate 16 In around 1827 or 1828 his portrait was painted by the Baltimore portrait painter Philip Tilyard 17 First Light Division formed edit nbsp Steuart s Baltimore City Guards march through Charleston in 1859 wearing bearskins taller than the Grenadier Guards 18 nbsp The Boston Greys encamped in Baltimore July 1844 Steuart s residence can be seen on the right hand side In 1833 a number of Baltimore regiments were formed into a brigade and Steuart was promoted from colonel to brigadier general 19 From 1841 to 1861 he was Commander of the First Light Division Maryland Volunteer Militia 20 21 Until the Civil War he would be the Commander in Chief of the Maryland Volunteers 22 23 The First Light Division comprised two brigades the 1st Light Brigade and the 2nd Brigade The First Brigade consisted of the 1st Cavalry 1st Artillery and 5th Infantry regiments The 2nd Brigade was composed of the 1st Rifle Regiment and the 53rd Infantry Regiment and the Battalion of Baltimore City Guards 18 In 1843 Steuart reviewed his troops and those of a visiting regiment from Pennsylvania at Camp Frederick accompanied by Governor David R Porter of Pennsylvania and various senior officers The event was attended by an immense concourse of spectators 23 and was commemorated in a lithograph published in the same year On July 19 1844 the Boston City Greys visited Baltimore and marched in parade with various companies of the 53rd Regiment Steuart hosted a party for the visiting militia which was held at his family estate in West Baltimore known as Maryland Square The event was celebrated by extensive coverage in the Baltimore American and like the previous year s visit from Pennsylvania was commemorated in a lithograph 24 Steuart also appears to have formed an acquaintance with the social reformer Dorothea Dix who in July 1850 was his guest at Steuart s country residence Sparrow s Point on the Chesapeake Bay Also a guest was the Swedish feminist and activist Fredrika Bremer who wrote in a letter to her sister Agathe Late in the evening I sat in the most beautiful moonlight with Miss Dix on the veranda of General Stuarts sic house looking towards the shining river and the wide Chesapeake Bay listening to the story of her simple yet remarkable life 25 Dix was a campaigner for better treatment of the mentally ill a subject which was also the life s work of Steuart s brother the physician Richard Sprigg Steuart Also among Steuart s social circle was the writer Washington Irving who was a regular guest at Maryland Square 26 Know Nothing elections edit nbsp Flag of the Know Nothing or American party nbsp Baltimore mayor Thomas Swann persuaded Governor Thomas W Ligon to stand down Steuart s militia during the 1857 elections Main article Know Nothing Riot of 1856 During the mid 1850s public order in Baltimore was threatened by the election of candidates of the Know Nothing party 27 In October 1856 the Know Nothing Mayor Samuel Hinks was pressed by Baltimorians to order Steuart s militia in readiness to maintain order during the mayoral elections as violence was anticipated Hinks duly gave Steuart the order writing that he should hold yourself with your command or such portion thereof as you may deem necessary in readiness to march at a moment s warning fully armed and equipped for active service 28 In response Steuart ordered his men to assemble in marching order on November 4 and await further orders 28 However perhaps fearful of greater violence the mayor soon rescinded his order 29 On October 31 he met with Steuart and requested that the general make his soldiers ready but not assembled and Steuart duly countermanded his original order 28 On polling day violence soon broke out with shots exchanged by competing mobs 29 In the 2nd and 8th wards several citizens were killed and many wounded 30 In the 6th ward artillery was used and a pitched battle fought on Orleans St between Know Nothings and rival Democrats raging for several hours 30 The result of the election in which voter fraud was widespread was a victory for the Know Nothings by around 9 000 votes 30 In 1857 fearing similar violence at the upcoming elections Governor Thomas W Ligon ordered Steuart to hold the First Light Division Maryland Volunteers in readiness 31 Ligon carried a painful sense of duty unfulfilled owing to the violence of the previous year and was determined to maintain order 32 However Mayor Thomas Swann successfully argued for a compromise measure involving special police forces to prevent disorder and Ligon once again balked at the use of military force He did not formally rescind the order to Steuart s militia but rather proclaimed that he did not contemplate the use upon that day of the military force which I have ordered to be enrolled and organized 31 32 This time although there was somewhat less violence than in 1856 the results of the vote were again compromised by the use of force and intimidation Mayor Swann was duly re elected albeit in a heavily disputed ballot 31 Slavery and the coming of the Civil War edit nbsp Communique from a Citizen of Maryland in The Liberator issue of September 26 1845 mentions Dr and Gen Stewart and Hope H Slatter Steuart s family were slaveholders and strong supporters of the South s peculiar institution although they supported the gradual abolition of slavery by voluntary means In 1828 Steuart served on the board of managers of the Maryland State Colonization Society of which Charles Carroll of Carrollton one of the co signers of the Declaration of Independence was president Steuart s father James Steuart was vice president and his brother Richard Sprigg Steuart was also on the board of managers 33 The MSCS was a branch of the American Colonization Society an organization dedicated to returning black Americans to lead free lives in African states such as Liberia The society proposed from the outset to be a remedy for slavery and declared in 1833 Resolved That this society believe and act upon the belief that colonization tends to promote emancipation by affording the emancipated slave a home where he can be happier than in this country and so inducing masters to manumit who would not do so unconditionally so that at a time not remote slavery would cease in the state by the full consent of those interested 34 In around 1842 Steuart inherited from his uncle William Steuart 1754 1838 2 000 acres in several tracts of land the best of which was Mount Steuart and 125 slaves becoming himself a substantial landowner and slaveholder 35 In 1846 his father James Steuart died and he inherited Maryland Square his family s mansion in the western suburbs of Baltimore 36 John Brown s raid on Harper s Ferry edit nbsp Suppression of John Brown s raid on Harpers Ferry In 1859 Steuart s militia participated in the suppression of John Brown s raid on Harpers Ferry an abortive attempt to ignite a slave rebellion 22 Steuart personally led six companies of Militia the City Guard Law Greys and Shields Guard from Baltimore and the United Guards Junior Defenders and Independent Riflemen from the city of Frederick 18 The departing Baltimore militia were cheered on by substantial crowds of citizens and well wishers 37 After Harper s Ferry militias in the South began to grow in importance as Southerners began to fear slave rebellion inspired by Northern Abolitionists 38 The following year in a letter to the National Intelligencer on November 19 1860 Steuart congratulated the editors on their support for the Fugitive Slave Acts and set out his own support for the Supreme Court s 1857 decision to uphold slavery in the case of Dred Scott v Sandford He also criticized the recent election of then President elect Abraham Lincoln on a platform opposed to slavery Steuart argued for the invalidity of Lincoln s election because of the negro votes cast and counted for him in the states of New York Ohio and Massachusetts 39 In 1861 as war grew closer Steuart established a family trust administered by four of his sons in order to look after his large family The trust income consisted chiefly of ground rents from his estates 40 Civil War editSee also Baltimore riot of 1861 nbsp Steuart s son Brig Gen George H Maryland Steuart nbsp Engraving of the Baltimore riot of 1861 By April 1861 it had become clear that war was inevitable On April 16 Steuart s eldest son George H Steuart then an officer in the United States Army resigned his captain s commission to join the Confederacy 41 On April 19 Baltimore was disrupted by riots during which Southern sympathizers attacked Union troops passing through the city by rail causing what were arguably the first casualties of the Civil War Steuart ordered his militia to assemble armed and uniformed to repel the Federal soldiers 22 as Steuart himself was strongly sympathetic to the Confederacy along with most of his senior officers It is possible that he may even have contemplated an invasion of Washington DC 42 Perhaps knowing this and no doubt aware that public opinion in Baltimore was divided Governor Thomas Holliday Hicks refused to order out the militia 43 Steuart s eldest son commanded one of the city militias during the disturbances of April 1861 and in a letter to his father the younger Steuart wrote I found nothing but disgust in my observations along the route and in the place I came to a large majority of the population are insane on the one idea of loyalty to the Union and the legislature is so diminished and unreliable that I rejoiced to hear that they intended to adjourn it seems that we are doomed to be trodden on by these troops who have taken military possession of our State and seem determined to commit all the outrages of an invading army 44 Steuart s brother the physician Richard Sprigg Steuart was also in Baltimore during the riots and he held a somewhat different view of the state of public opinion in the city I happened to be in Baltimore on the night of the 19th April 1861 and witnessed the outburst of feeling on the part of the people Generally when the Massachusetts troops were passing thru the city of Baltimore it was evident to me that 75 p c of the population was in favour of repelling these troops Instinctively the people seemed to look upon them as intruders or as invaders of the South not as defenders of the City of Baltimore How or by whom the first blow was given can not be now ascertained but the feeling of resistance was contagious and powerful The Mayor of the City nevertheless though it his duty to keep the peace and protect these troops in their passage thru Baltimore 45 Steuart and his son made strenuous efforts to persuade Marylanders to secede from the Union and to use the militia to prevent the occupation of the State by Union soldiers But by April 25 his efforts had become largely defensive In a letter of the same date he wrote to Governor of Virginia John Letcher stating that he was very anxious to hold a strong position at or near the Relay House so as to guard and keep open railway communications and at the same time cutting it off from Washington 46 Steuart s efforts to persuade Maryland to secede from the Union were in vain On April 29 the Maryland Legislature voted 53 13 against secession and the state was swiftly occupied by Union soldiers to prevent any reconsideration Flight to Virginia edit nbsp Jarvis Hospital was built on the grounds of Maryland Square visible bottom right at the outbreak of the Civil War The political situation remained uncertain until May 13 1861 when Union troops occupied the state restoring order and preventing any further move to secession and by late summer Maryland was firmly in the hands of Union soldiers Arrests of Confederate sympathizers soon followed and General Steuart fled to Charlottesville Virginia after which much of his family s property was confiscated by the Federal Government 47 Maryland Square was seized by the Union Army and re named Camp Andrew after Massachusetts Governor John Albion Andrew a noted abolitionist 48 Union troops were quartered in Steuart s mansion and Jarvis Hospital was soon erected on the grounds of the estate to care for Federal wounded 49 Steuart was not alone in fleeing to Virginia to join the Confederacy Many members of the newly formed Maryland Line in the Confederate army would be drawn from Steuart s Maryland militia 50 though at age 71 Steuart was personally judged too old for active service Despite this he spent much of the war following the Confederate army and was present at or near a number of battles 51 including Gettysburg 52 and the First Battle of Manassas where he was so close to the fighting that he was actually captured by Union forces Fortunately when it was discovered he was not a serving officer in the Confederate army he was soon released 53 The cost of war edit Steuart is often confused with his eldest son Brigadier General George H Steuart 54 who rose rapidly in the Confederate command distinguishing himself at the First Battle of Manassas and fighting for the South at many battles including Cross Keys Winchester and Gettysburg Wounded captured and exchanged the younger Steuart would eventually surrender with General Lee at Appomattox Local residents in Baltimore would come to know father and son as The Old General and The Young General 55 Steuart s third son Lieutenant William James Steuart 1832 1864 also fought for the Confederacy During the Battle of the Wilderness he was severely wounded in the hip and was sent to Guinea station a hospital for officers in Richmond Virginia There on 21 May 1864 he died 56 A friend of general Steuart at the University of Virginia wrote to his bereaved father You will not charge me I trust with intruding on the sacredness of your grief if I cannot help giving expression to my deep heartfelt sympathy with your great sorrow You have sacrificed so much for the righteous cause already that I know you will present this last and most precious offering also with the fortitude of your character and the submission of a Christian Still I know how valuable this son of yours had been to your interests how dear to your heart and I cannot tell you with what deep and sincere grief I heard of your terrible loss 57 Steuart s brother the physician Richard Sprigg Steuart chose not to leave Maryland remaining in his home state throughout the war though his open support for the Confederacy meant that he too became a fugitive from the federal authorities Baltimore resident W W Glenn described him as living in constant fear of capture I was spending the evening out when a footstep approached my chair from behind and a hand was laid upon me I turned and saw Dr R S Steuart He has been concealed for more than six months His neighbors are so bitter against him that he dare not go home and he committed himself so decidedly on the 19th April and is known to be so decided a Southerner that it more than likely he would be thrown into a Fort He goes about from place to place sometimes staying in one county sometimes in another and then passing a few days in the city He never shows in the day time amp is cautious who sees him at any time He has several negroes in his confidence at different places 58 General Steuart corresponded regularly with a friend Sally J Newman in Hilton Va during course of the war In these letters which are held by the Maryland Historical Society Steuart deplores Negro suffrage and the general condition of the country 40 After the war editSteuart s dedication to the Lost Cause of the Confederacy would prove a disaster for him and his family Although Maryland Square was restored to him after the war neither he nor his children would live there again 59 Jarvis hospital was closed in 1865 at the war s end and in the summer of 1866 the buildings were auctioned off permitting successful bidders 10 days from the date of auction in which to remove their purchases from the grounds 60 After the war Steuart travelled to Europe but returned to Maryland in 1867 51 where he died on October 21 1867 age 77 He is buried at Greenmount Cemetery Maryland along with his wife eldest son and other members of his family 61 Family life edit nbsp Headstone marking the grave of George H Steuart Major General Maryland Volunteers his wife Anne Jane and other members of his family Greenmount Cemetery Baltimore Steuart married Ann Jane Edmondson in Baltimore on May 3 1836 They had 10 children George H Steuart 1828 1903 Confederate brigadier general during the American Civil War Isaac Edmondson Steuart 1830 1891 Suffered from mental illness and was in and out of mental institutions for much of his life 40 Lieutenant William James Steuart 1832 1864 C S A Killed at the Battle of the Wilderness 1864 56 Thomas Edmondson Steuart 1834 1866 Dr James Henry Steuart 1835 1892 Mary Elizabeth Steuart 1837 1840 Ann Rebecca Steuart 1839 1865 Charles David Steuart 1841 1921 Like his older brother Isaac suffered from mental illness and was in and out of mental institutions for much of his life 40 Margaret Sophia Steuart 1843 1860 Henrietta Elizabeth Steuart 1846 1867 62 Legacy editPerhaps not surprisingly as Maryland had remained loyal to the Union there is no monument to Steuart in his home state Maryland Square was demolished in 1884 and little trace of his mansion or Jarvis Hospital remains today However in 1919 the Sisters of Bon Secours themselves opened a hospital their first in the United States at 2000 West Baltimore Street very near the location of the former Jarvis Hospital 63 The Grace Medical Center continues to flourish today and forms an important part of the modern neighbourhood which still retains the name of Steuart Hill 59 64 See also edit nbsp American Civil War portal History of the Maryland Militia in the Civil War Maryland Line CSA Notes edit a b c The Huntington Library quarterly 1949 Brumbaugh Gaius Marcus p 473 Maryland Records Colonial Revolutionary County and Church Retrieved January 2012 Nelker p 66 Harrison Bruce p 937 The Family Forest Descendants of Lady Joan Beaufort permanent dead link Retrieved August 28 2010 Richard Sprigg Steuart and the History of Spring Grove Hospital Archived 2010 01 26 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved Jan 13 2010 Register of the Military Order of Foreign Wars of the United States National Commandery 1900 Retrieved Jan 14 2010 Register of the Military Order of Foreign Wars of the United States p 101 National Commandery 1900 Retrieved Jan 14 2010 Hickman Nathaniel p 100 The citizen soldiers at North Point and Fort McHenry September 12 amp 13 1814 published by James Young 1889 Retrieved Jan 14 2010 Marine William Matthew p 326 The British Invasion of Maryland 1812 1815 Retrieved Jan 14 2010 Brackenridge Henry Marie p 249 History of the Late War between the United States and Great Britain Philadelphia 1836 Retrieved Jan 15 2010 Richardson p 228 American Quarterly Review Issues 35 36 by Robert Walsh p 495 1835 Retrieved Jan 15 2010 a b George p 143 Niles Weekly Register Volume 14 by Hezekiah Niles 1818 Retrieved Jan 15 2010 Archives of Maryland House of Delegates Baltimore 1790 1864 Retrieved Jan 13 2010 Extra Globe dated Wednesday October 7 1835 Retrieved Jan 15 2010 www tilyard net Retrieved April 2013 a b c Field Ron et al p 33 The Confederate Army 1861 65 Missouri Kentucky amp Maryland permanent dead link Osprey Publishing 2008 Retrieved May 10 2010 Griffith Thomas W p 257 Annals of Baltimore 1833 Retrieved February 28 2010 Sullivan David M The United States Marine Corps in the Civil War The First Year p 286 White Mane Publishing 1997 Retrieved Jan 13 2010 Sparks Jared and others p 168 The American Almanac and Repository of Useful Knowledge Volume 10 Retrieved August 29 2010 a b c Hartzler Daniel D p 13 A Band of Brothers Photographic Epilogue to Marylanders in the Confederacy Retrieved March 1 2010 a b Niles Weekly register Volume 62 p 177 Retrieved March 2 2010 Rice p 119 Sjoberg Leif American Swedish 1973 Retrieved January 2012 Richardson p 226 Andrews p 475 a b c Melton p 103 a b Andrews p 476 a b c Andrews p 477 a b c Andrews p 478 a b Melton p 159 The African Repository Volume 3 1827 p 251 edited by Ralph Randolph Gurley Retrieved Jan 15 2010 Stebbins Giles B Facts and Opinions Touching the Real Origin Character and Influence of the American Colonization Society Views of Wilberforce Clarkson and Others published by Jewitt Proctor and Worthington 1853 Retrieved February 16 2010 Nelker p 131 Memoirs of Richard Sprigg Steuart Nelker p 107 Andrews p 497 Ken Burns The American Civil War Letter from George H Steuart to the National Intelligencer dated November 19 1860 unpublished a b c d archive of the Maryland Historical Society Retrieved Jan 13 2010 Cullum George Washington p 226 Biographical Register of the Officers and Graduates of the U S Military Retrieved Jan 16 2010 Lockwood p 279 Retrieved June 2012 Brugger Robert J p 285 Maryland A Middle Temperament 1634 1980 Johns Hopkins University Press 1996 Retrieved Jan 15 2010 Mitchell Charles W p 102 Maryland Voices of the Civil War Retrieved February 26 2010 Mitchell Charles W p 101 Maryland voices of the Civil War Retrieved February 26 2010 Lockwood amp Lockwood p 210 The Siege of Washington The Untold Story of the Twelve Days That Shook the Nation Retrieved June 2012 Brugger Robert J p 280 Maryland A Middle Temperament 1634 1980 Retrieved Feb 28 2010 Mitchell p 166 Nelker p 120 Goldsborough p 9 a b Hanson p 272 The English Confederate The Life Of A Civil War General 1815 1889 by Collett Leventhorpe p 110 Retrieved Jan 13 2010 Scharf John Thomas p 668 The Chronicles of Baltimore Retrieved February 28 2010 Sjoberg Leif p 69 American Swedish 1973 Retrieved February 2011 Steuart William Calvert The Steuart Hill Area s Colorful Past Sunday Sun Magazine February 10 1963 a b Nelker p 67 Mitchell p 339 Mitchell Charles W p 285 Maryland Voices of the Civil War Retrieved February 26 2010 a b Rice p 290 Rice p 256 Greenmount Cemetery website Retrieved Jan 13 2010 Nelker p 67 68 History of Bon Secours Hospital Baltimore Archived 2010 04 12 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved Feb 7 2010 Steuart William Calvert Article in Sunday Sun Magazine The Steuart Hill Area s Colorful Past Baltimore February 10 1963References editAndrews Matthew Page History of Maryland Doubleday Doran amp Co New York City 1929 Brackenridge Henry Marie p 249 History of the Late War between the United States and Great Britain Philadelphia 1836 Retrieved Jan 15 2010 Field Ron et al The Confederate Army 1861 65 Missouri Kentucky amp Maryland permanent dead link Osprey Publishing 2008 Retrieved March 4 2010 George Christopher T Terror on the Chesapeake The War of 1812 on the Bay White Mane Books 2000 Goldsborough W W The Maryland Line in the Confederate Army Guggenheimer Weil amp Co 1900 ISBN 0 913419 00 1 Gurley Ralph Randolph Ed p 251 The African Repository Volume 3 1827 Retrieved Jan 15 2010 Hanson George Adolphus Old Kent The Eastern Shore of Maryland Notes Illustrative of the Most Ancient Records Of Kent County Maryland Published by John P Des Forges 1876 ASIN B0013KKEXE Retrieved on Jan 11 2011 Harrison Bruce The Family Forest Descendants of Lady Joan Beaufort permanent dead link Retrieved August 28 2010 Hickey Donald R The War of 1812 a Forgotten Conflict University of Illinois Press October 1 1990 ISBN 0 252 06059 8 Retrieved January 11 2010 Hickman Nathaniel p 100 The Citizen Soldiers at North Point and Fort McHenry September 12 amp 13 1814 published by James Young 1889 Retrieved Jan 14 2010 Leventhorpe Collett p 110 The English Confederate The Life Of A Civil War General 1815 1889 McFarland amp Company 2006 Retrieved Jan 11 2010 Marine William Matthew The British Invasion of Maryland 1812 1815 Nabu Press 2010 ISBN 1 176 49230 6 Retrieved Jan 14 2010 Melton Tracy Matthew Hanging Henry Gambrill The Violent Career of Baltimore s Plug Uglies Maryland Historical Society Baltimore 2005 ISBN 0 938420 93 3 Mitchell C W Maryland Voices of the Civil War Johns Hopkins University Press 2007 Nelker Gladys P The Clan Steuart Genealogical Publishing 1970 Papenfuse Edward C et al Archives of Maryland Historical List new series Vol 1 Annapolis MD Maryland State Archives 1990 Richardson Hester Dorey Side Lights on Maryland History With Sketches of Early Maryland Families Tidewater Publishing 1967 ASIN B00146BDXW ISBN 0 8063 0296 8 ISBN 978 0 8063 0296 6 Shirk Ida M p 160 Descendants of Richard amp Elizabeth Ewen Talbott of Popular Knowle Retrieved January 2012 Sjoberg Leif American Swedish 1973 Retrieved February 2011 Sparks Jared and others p 168 The American Almanac and Repository of Useful Knowledge Volume 10 Retrieved August 29 2010 Steuart George H Letter to the National Intelligencer dated November 19 1860 unpublished Archive of the Maryland Historical Society Steuart James Papers Maryland Historical Society unpublished Steuart William Calvert Article in Sunday Sun Magazine The Steuart Hill Area s Colorful Past Baltimore February 10 1963 Sullivan David M The United States Marine Corps in the Civil War The First Year White Mane Publishing 1997 Retrieved Jan 13 2010 White Roger B Article in The Maryland Gazette Steuart Only Anne Arundel Rebel General November 13 1969 External links editGrave of Major General George H Steuart at www greenmountcemetery com Archived 2010 01 27 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on Jan 11 2010 Archives of Maryland Historical List House of Delegates Baltimore City 1790 1864 Retrieved on Jan 11 2010 Letters of Major General George H Steuart from the Archive of the Maryland Historical Society Retrieved on Jan 11 2010 Account of the role of the Maryland Militia at the Battle of North Point at National Guard website Retrieved on Jan 11 2010 The Huntingdon Library Quarterly Volume 12 1949 Retrieved Jan 13 2010 Register of the Military Order of Foreign Wars of the United States National Commandery 1900 Retrieved Jan 14 2010 Extra Globe dated Wednesday October 7 1835 Retrieved Jan 15 2010 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title George H Steuart militia general amp oldid 1184763640, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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