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George Meade

George Gordon Meade (December 31, 1815 – November 6, 1872) was a United States Army Major General who commanded the Army of the Potomac during the American Civil War from 1863 to 1865. He fought in many of the key battles of the Eastern theater and defeated the Confederate Army of Northern Virginia led by General Robert E. Lee at the Battle of Gettysburg.


George Meade
Meade, portrait by Mathew Brady
Birth nameGeorge Gordon Meade
Nickname(s)"Old Snapping Turtle"
Born(1815-12-31)December 31, 1815
Cádiz, Spain
DiedNovember 6, 1872(1872-11-06) (aged 56)
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Buried
Laurel Hill Cemetery, Philadelphia
Allegiance United States of America
Service/branch United States Army
Years of service1835–1836
1842–1872
Rank Major General (USA)
Commands heldUnited States Lake Survey
I Corps
V Corps
Army of the Potomac
Military Division of the Atlantic
Department of the South
Third Military District
Battles/wars

He was born in Cádiz, Spain, to a wealthy Philadelphia merchant family and graduated from the United States Military Academy in 1835. He fought in the Second Seminole War and the Mexican–American War. He served in the United States Army Corps of Topographical Engineers and led construction of lighthouses in Florida and New Jersey from 1851 to 1856 and the United States Lake Survey from 1857 to 1861.

His Civil War service began as brigadier general with the Pennsylvania Reserves, building defenses around Washington D.C. He fought in the Peninsula Campaign and the Seven Days Battles. He was severely wounded at the Battle of Glendale and returned to lead his brigade at the Second Battle of Bull Run. As a division commander, he had success at the Battle of South Mountain and assumed temporary command of the I Corps at the Battle of Antietam. Meade's division broke through the lines at the Battle of Fredericksburg but were forced to retreat due to lack of support. Meade was promoted to major general and commander of the V Corps, which he led during the Battle of Chancellorsville.

He was appointed to command the Army of the Potomac just three days before the Battle of Gettysburg and arrived on the battlefield after the first day's action on July 1, 1863. He organized his forces on favorable ground to fight an effective defensive battle against Robert E. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia and repelled a series of massive assaults throughout the next two days. While elated about the victory, President Abraham Lincoln was critical of Meade due to his perception of an ineffective pursuit during the retreat, which allowed Lee and his army to escape back to Virginia. Meade's troops had a minor victory in the Bristoe Campaign but a stalemate at the Battle of Mine Run. Meade's cautious approach prompted Lincoln to look for a new commander of the Army of the Potomac.

In 1864–1865, Meade continued to command the Army of the Potomac through the Overland Campaign, the Richmond–Petersburg Campaign, and the Appomattox Campaign, but he was overshadowed by the direct supervision of the general-in-chief, Lt. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant, who accompanied him throughout these campaigns. Grant conducted most of the strategy during these campaigns, leaving Meade with significantly less influence than before. After the war, Meade commanded the Military Division of the Atlantic from 1865 to 1866 and again from 1869 to 1872. He oversaw the formation of the state governments and reentry into the United States for five southern states through his command of the Department of the South from 1866 to 1868 and the Third Military District in 1872. Meade was subjected to intense political rivalries within the Army, notably with Major Gen. Daniel Sickles, who tried to discredit Meade's role in the victory at Gettysburg. He had a notoriously short temper which earned him the nickname of "Old Snapping Turtle".

Early life and education edit

Meade was born on December 31, 1815, in Cádiz, Spain,[1] the eighth of ten children of Richard Worsam Meade and Margaret Coats Butler.[2] His great-grandfather Irishman Robert Meade (father of George Meade) was a wealthy merchant and land speculator in Philadelphia.[3] His father was wealthy due to Spanish-American trade and was appointed U.S. naval agent.[2] He was ruined financially because of his support of Spain in the Peninsular War; his family returned to the United States in 1817, in precarious financial straits.[4]

Meade attended elementary school in Philadelphia[5] and the American Classical and Military Lyceum, a private school in Philadelphia modeled after the U.S. Military Academy at West Point.[6] His father died in 1828 when George was 12 years old[4] and he was taken out of the Germantown military academy. George was placed in a school run by Salmon P. Chase in Washington D.C.; however, it closed after a few months due to Chase's other obligations. He was then placed in the Mount Hope Institution in Baltimore, Maryland.[7]

Meade entered the United States Military Academy at West Point on July 1, 1831.[8] He would have preferred to attend college and study law and did not enjoy his time at West Point.[9] He graduated 19th in his class of 56 cadets in 1835.[10] He was uninterested in the details of military dress and drills and accumulated 168 demerits, only 32 short of the amount that would trigger a mandatory dismissal.[11]

Topographical Corps and Mexican-American War edit

 
Meade photographed by Mathew Brady or Levin C. Handy

Meade was commissioned a brevet second lieutenant in the 3rd Artillery.[12] He worked for a summer as an assistant surveyor on the construction of the Long Island Railroad and was assigned to service in Florida.[13] He fought in the Second Seminole War[14] and was assigned to accompany a group of Seminole to Indian territory in the West.[13] He became a full second lieutenant by year's end, and in the fall of 1836, after the minimum required one year of service,[11] he resigned from the army. He returned to Florida and worked as a private citizen for his brother-in-law, James Duncan Graham, as an assistant surveyor to the United States Army Corps of Topographical Engineers on a railroad project.[15] He conducted additional survey work for the Topographical Engineers on the Texas-Louisiana border, the Mississippi River Delta[16] and the northeastern boundary of Maine and Canada.[17]

In 1842, a congressional measure was passed which excluded civilians from working in the Army Corps of Topographical Engineers[18] and Meade reentered the army as a second lieutenant in order to continue his work with them.[19] In November 1843, he was assigned to work on lighthouse construction under Major Hartman Bache. He worked on the Brandywine Shoal lighthouse in the Delaware Bay.[20]

Meade served in the Mexican–American War and was assigned to the staffs of Generals Zachary Taylor[21] and Robert Patterson.[22] He fought at the Battle of Palo Alto,[23] the Battle of Resaca de la Palma[24] and the Battle of Monterrey.[25] He served under General William Worth at Monterrey and led a party up a hill to attack a fortified position.[26] He was brevetted to first lieutenant[25] and received a gold-mounted sword for gallantry from the citizens of Philadelphia.[27]

In 1849, Meade was assigned to Fort Brooke in Florida to assist with Seminole attacks on settlements.[28] In 1851, he led the construction of the Carysfort Reef Light in Key Largo.[29] In 1852, the Topographical Corps established the United States Lighthouse Board and Meade was appointed the Seventh District engineer with responsibilities in Florida. He led the construction of Sand Key Light in Key West;[30] Jupiter Inlet Light in Jupiter, Florida; and Sombrero Key Light in the Florida Keys.[31] When Bache was reassigned to the West Coast, Meade took over responsibility for the Fourth District in New Jersey and Delaware[32] and built the Barnegat Light on Long Beach Island,[33] Absecon Light in Atlantic City, and the Cape May Light in Cape May. He also designed a hydraulic lamp that was used in several American lighthouses. Meade received an official promotion to first lieutenant in 1851,[32] and to captain in 1856.[34]

In 1857, Meade was given command of the Lakes Survey mission of the Great Lakes. Completion of the survey of Lake Huron and extension of the surveys of Lake Michigan down to Grand and Little Traverse Bays were done under his command.[35] Prior to Captain Meade's command, Great Lakes' water level readings were taken locally with temporary gauges; a uniform plane of reference had not been established. In 1858, based on his recommendation, instrumentation was set in place for the tabulation of records across the basin.[36] Meade stayed with the Lakes Survey until the 1861 outbreak of the Civil War.[37]

American Civil War edit

Meade was appointed brigadier general of volunteers on August 31, 1861,[38] a few months after the start of the American Civil War, based on the strong recommendation of Pennsylvania Governor Andrew Curtin.[39] He was assigned command of the 2nd Brigade of the Pennsylvania Reserves under General George A. McCall.[40] The Pennsylvania Reserves were initially assigned to the construction of defenses around Washington, D.C.[25]

Peninsula campaign edit

In March 1862, the Army of the Potomac was reorganized into four corps,[41] Meade served as part of the I Corps under Maj. Gen Irvin McDowell.[25] The I Corps was stationed in the Rappahannock area, but in June, the Pennsylvania Reserves were detached and sent to the Peninsula to reinforce the main army.[42] With the onset of the Seven Days Battles on June 25, the Reserves were directly involved in the fighting. At Mechanicsville and Gaines Mill, Meade's brigade was mostly held in reserve,[43] but at Glendale on June 30, the brigade was in the middle of a fierce battle. His brigade lost 1,400 men[44] and Meade was shot in the right arm and through the back.[45] He was sent home to Philadelphia to recuperate.[46] Meade resumed command of his brigade in time for the Second Battle of Bull Run, then assigned to Major General Irvin McDowell's corps of the Army of Virginia. His brigade made a heroic stand on Henry House Hill to protect the rear of the retreating Union Army.[47]

Maryland campaign edit

The division's commander John F. Reynolds was sent to Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, to train militia units and Meade assumed temporary division command at the Battle of South Mountain[48] and the Battle of Antietam.[49] Under Meade's command, the division successfully attacked and captured a strategic position on high ground near Turner's Gap held by Robert E. Rodes' troops which forced the withdrawal of other Confederate troops.[50] When Meade's troops stormed the heights, the corps commander Joseph Hooker, exclaimed, "Look at Meade! Why, with troops like those, led in that way, I can win anything!"[51]

On September 17, 1862,[52] at Antietam, Meade assumed temporary command of the I Corps and oversaw fierce combat after Hooker was wounded and requested Meade replace him.[53] On September 29, 1862, Reynolds returned from his service in Harrisburg. Reynolds assumed command of the I Corps and Meade assumed command of the Third Division.[54]

Fredericksburg and Chancellorsville edit

 
General Meade's horse, Old Baldy

On November 5, 1862, Ambrose Burnside replaced McClellan as commander of the Army of the Potomac. Burnside gave command of the I Corps to Reynolds which frustrated Meade as he had more combat experience than Reynolds.[55]

Meade was promoted to major general of the Pennsylvania Reserves on November 29, 1862, and given command of a division in the "Left Grand Division" under William B. Franklin.[55] During the Battle of Fredericksburg, Meade's division made the only breakthrough of the Confederate lines, spearheading through a gap in Lt. Gen. Thomas J. "Stonewall" Jackson's corps at the southern end of the battlefield. However, his attack was not reinforced, which resulted in the loss of much of his division.[56] He led the Center Grand Division through the Mud March and stationed his troops on the banks of the Rappahanock.[57]

On December 22, 1862, Meade replaced Daniel Butterfield in command of the V Corps which he led in the Battle of Chancellorsville. On January 26, 1863, Joseph Hooker assumed command of the Army of the Potomac.[55] Hooker had grand plans for the Battle of Chancellorsville, but was unsuccessful in execution, allowing the Confederates to seize the initiative. After the battle, Meade wrote to his wife that, "General Hooker has disappointed all his friends by failing to show his fighting qualities in a pinch."[58]

Meade's corps was left in reserve for most of the battle, contributing to the Union defeat. Meade was among Hooker's commanders who argued to advance against Lee, but Hooker chose to retreat.[59] Meade learned afterward that Hooker misrepresented his position on the advance and confronted him. All of Hooker's commanders supported Meade's position except Dan Sickles.[60]

Gettysburg campaign edit

In June 1863, Lee took the initiative and moved his Army of Northern Virginia into Maryland and Pennsylvania.[61] Hooker responded rapidly and positioned the Army of the Potomac between Lee's army and Washington D.C. However, the relationship between the Lincoln administration and Hooker had deteriorated due to Hooker's poor performance at Chancellorsville.[62] Hooker requested additional troops be assigned from Harper's Ferry to assist in the pursuit of Lee in the Gettysburg Campaign. When Lincoln and General in Chief Henry Halleck refused, Hooker resigned in protest.[63]

Command of the Army of the Potomac edit

In the early morning hours of June 28, 1863, a messenger from President Abraham Lincoln arrived to inform Meade of his appointment as Hooker's replacement.[64] Upon being woken up, he'd assumed that army politics had caught up to him and that he was under arrest, only to find that he'd been given leadership of the Army of the Potomac.

He had not actively sought command and was not the president's first choice. John F. Reynolds, one of four major generals who outranked Meade in the Army of the Potomac, had earlier turned down the president's suggestion that he take over.[65] Three corps commanders, John Sedgwick, Henry Slocum, and Darius N. Couch, recommended Meade for command of the army and agreed to serve under him despite outranking him.[66] While his colleagues were excited for the change in leadership, the soldiers in the Army of Potomac were uncertain of Meade since his modesty, lack of the theatrical and scholarly demeanor did not match their expectations for a General.[67]

Meade assumed command of the Army of the Potomac on June 28, 1863.[68] In a letter to his wife, Meade wrote that command of the army was "more likely to destroy one's reputation then to add to it."[69]

Battle of Gettysburg edit

 
Engraving by James E. Kelly of Meade and the Council of War - July 2, 1863

Meade rushed the remainder of his army to Gettysburg and deployed his forces for a defensive battle.[70] Meade was only four days into his leadership of the Army of the Potomac and informed his corps commanders that he would provide quick decisions and entrust them with the authority to carry out those orders the best way they saw fit. He also made it clear that he was counting on the corps commanders to provide him with sound advice on strategy.[70]

Since Meade was new to high command, he did not remain in headquarters but constantly moved about the battlefield, issuing orders and ensuring that they were followed. Meade gave orders for the Army of the Potomac to move forward in a broad front to prevent Lee from flanking them and threatening the cities of Baltimore and Washington D.C. He also issued a conditional plan for a retreat to Pipe Creek, Maryland in case things went poorly for the Union. By 6 pm on the evening of July 1, 1863, Meade sent a telegram to Washington informing them of his decision to concentrate forces and make a stand at Gettysburg.[71]

On July 2, 1863, Meade continued to monitor and maintain the placement of the troops. He was outraged when he discovered that Daniel Sickles had moved his troops one mile forward to high ground without Meade's permission and left a gap in the line which threatened the right flank. Meade recognized that Little Round Top was critical to maintaining the left flank. He sent Warren to determine the status of the hill and quickly issued orders for the V Corps to occupy it when it was discovered empty. Meade continued to reinforce the troops defending Little Round Top from Longstreet's advance and suffered the near destruction of thirteen brigades. One questionable decision Meade made that day was to order Slocum's XII Corps to move from Culp's Hill to the left flank which allowed Confederate troops to temporarily capture it.[71]

On the evening of July 2, 1863, Meade called a "council of war" consisting of his top generals. The council reviewed the battle to date and agreed to keep fighting in a defensive position.[72]

 
General Meade's headquarters, Gettysburg, Pennsylvania

On July 3, 1863, Meade gave orders for the XII Corps and XI Corps to retake Culp's Hill and personally rode the length of the lines from Cemetery Ridge to Little Round Top to inspect the troops. His headquarters were in the Leister House directly behind Cemetery Ridge which exposed it to the 150-gun cannonade which began at 1 pm. The house came under direct fire from incorrectly targeted Confederate guns; Butterfield was wounded and sixteen horses tied up in front of the house were killed. Meade did not want to vacate the headquarters and make it more difficult for messages to find him, but the situation became too dire and the house was evacuated.[71]

During the three days, Meade made excellent use of capable subordinates, such as Maj. Gens. John F. Reynolds and Winfield S. Hancock, to whom he delegated great responsibilities.[73] He reacted swiftly to fierce assaults on his line's left and right which culminated in Lee's disastrous assault on the center, known as Pickett's Charge.[74]

By the end of three days of fighting, the Army of the Potomac's 60,000 troops and 30,000 horses had not been fed in three days and were weary from fighting.[75] On the evening of July 4, 1863, Meade held a second council of war with his top generals, minus Hancock and Gibbon, who were absent due to duty and injury. The council reviewed the status of the army and debated staying in place at Gettysburg versus chasing the retreating Army of Northern Virginia. The council voted to remain in place for one day to allow for rest and recovery and then set out after Lee's army. Meade sent a message to Halleck stating, "I make a reconnaissance to-morrow, to ascertain what the intention of the enemy is … should the enemy retreat, I shall pursue him on his flanks."[76]

Lee's retreat edit

On July 4, it was observed that the Confederate Army was forming a new line near the nearby mountains after pulling back their left flank, but by July 5 it was clear that they were making a retreat, leaving Meade and his men to tend to the wounded and fallen soldiers until July 6, when Meade ordered his men to Maryland.[77]

Meade was criticized by President Lincoln and others for not aggressively pursuing the Confederates during their retreat.[78] Meade's perceived caution stemmed from three causes: casualties and exhaustion of the Army of the Potomac which had engaged in forced marches and heavy fighting for a week, heavy general officer casualties that impeded effective command and control, and a desire to guard a hard-won victory against a sudden reversal.[79] Halleck informed Meade of the president's dissatisfaction which infuriated Meade that politicians and non-field-based officers were telling him how to fight the war. He wrote back and offered to resign his command, but Halleck refused the resignation and clarified that his communication was not meant as a rebuke but an incentive to continue the pursuit of Lee's army.[80]

At one point, the Army of Northern Virginia was trapped with its back to the rain-swollen, almost impassable Potomac River; however, the Army of Northern Virginia was able to erect strong defensive positions before Meade, whose army had also been weakened by the fighting, could organize an effective attack.[81] Lee knew he had the superior defensive position and hoped that Meade would attack and the resulting Union Army losses would dampen the victory at Gettysburg. By July 14, 1863, Lee's troops built a temporary bridge over the river and retreated into Virginia.[79]

Meade was rewarded for his actions at Gettysburg by a promotion to brigadier general in the regular army on July 7, 1863, and the Thanks of Congress,[82] which commended Meade "... and the officers and soldiers of the Army of the Potomac, for the skill and heroic valor which at Gettysburg repulsed, defeated, and drove back, broken and dispirited, beyond the Rappahannock, the veteran army of the rebellion."[83]

Meade wrote the following to his wife after meeting President Lincoln:

"Yesterday I received an order to repair to Washington, to see the President. ... The President was, as he always is, very considerate and kind. He found no fault with my operations, although it was very evident he was disappointed that I had not got a battle out of Lee. He coincided with me that there was not much to be gained by any farther advance; but General Halleck was very urgent that something should be done, but what that something was he did not define. As the Secretary of War was absent in Tennessee, final action was postponed till his return."[84]

Bristoe and Mine Run campaign edit

 
Generals George G. Meade, Andrew A. Humphreys and staff in Culpeper, Virginia, outside Meade's headquarters, 1863

During the fall of 1863, the Army of the Potomac was weakened by the transfer of the XI and XII Corps to the Western Theater.[85] Meade felt pressure from Halleck and the Lincoln administration to pursue Lee into Virginia but he was cautious due to a misperception that Lee's Army was 70,000 in size when the reality was they were only 55,000 compared to the Army of the Potomac at 76,000. Many of the Union troop replacements for the losses suffered at Gettysburg were new recruits and it was uncertain how they would perform in combat.[86]

Lee petitioned Jefferson Davis to allow him to take the offensive against the cautious Meade which would also prevent further Union troops being sent to the Western Theater to support William Rosencrans at the Battle of Chickamauga.[87]

 
Commanders of the Army of the Potomac, Gouverneur K. Warren, William H. French, George G. Meade, Henry J. Hunt, Andrew A. Humphreys, and George Sykes in September 1863

The Army of the Potomac was stationed along the north bank of the Rapidan River and Meade made his headquarters in Culpeper, Virginia.[88] In the Bristoe Campaign, Lee attempted to flank the Army of the Potomac and force Meade to move north of the Rappahannock River.[89] The Union forces had deciphered the Confederate semaphore code. This along with spies and scouts gave Meade advance notice of Lee's movements.[90] As Lee's troops moved north to the west of the Army of the Potomac, Meade abandoned his headquarters at Culpeper and gave orders for his troops to move north to intercept Lee.[91] Meade successfully outmaneuvered Lee in the campaign and gained a small victory. Lee reported that his plans failed due to the quickness of Meade's redeployment of resources.[92] However, Meade's inability to stop Lee from approaching the outskirts of Washington prompted Lincoln to look for another commander of the Army of the Potomac.[93]

In late November 1863, Meade planned one last offensive against Lee before winter weather limited troop movement. In the Mine Run Campaign, Meade attempted to attack the right flank of the Army of Northern Virginia south of the Rapidan River but the maneuver failed due to the poor performance of William H. French.[94] There was heavy skirmishing but a full attack never occurred. Meade determined that the Confederate forces were too strong[95] and was convinced by Warren that an attack would have been suicidal.[96] Meade held a council of war which concluded to withdraw across the Rapidan River during the night of December 1, 1863.[97]

Overland campaign edit

1864 was an election year and Lincoln understood that the fate of his reelection lay in the Union Army success against the Confederates. Lt. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant, fresh off his success in the Western Theater, was appointed commander of all Union armies in March 1864.[98] In his meeting with Lincoln, Grant was told he could select who he wanted to lead the Army of the Potomac. Edwin M. Stanton, the Secretary of War told Grant, "You will find a very weak irresolute man there and my advice to you is to replace him at once."[99]

Meade offered to resign[100] and stated the task at hand was of such importance that he would not stand in the way of Grant choosing the right man for the job and offered to serve wherever placed. Grant assured Meade he had no intentions of replacing him.[101] Grant later wrote that this incident gave him a more favorable opinion of Meade than the great victory at Gettysburg. Grant knew that Meade disapproved of Lincoln's strategy and was unpopular with politicians and the press. Grant was not willing to allow him free command of the Army of the Potomac without direct supervision.[102]

Grant's orders to Meade before the Overland Campaign were direct and the point. He stated "Lee's army will be your objective point. Wherever Lee goes, there you will go also."[103] On May 4, 1864, the Army of the Potomac left its winter encampment and crossed the Rapidan River. Meade and Grant both believed that Lee would retreat to the North Anna River or to Mine Run. Lee had received intelligence about the movements of the Army of the Potomac and countered with a move to the East and met the Union Army at the Wilderness.[104] Meade ordered Warren to attack with his whole Corps and had Hancock reinforce with his II Corps.[105] Meade ordered additional Union troops to join the battle but they struggled to maintain formation and communicate with each other in the thick woods of the Wilderness.[106] After three days of brutal fighting and the loss of 17,000 men, the Union Army called it a draw and Meade and Grant moved with their forces south toward Spotsylvania Court House to place the Union Army between Lee's forces and Richmond in the hopes of drawing them out to open field combat.[107]

 
Horse artillery headquarters in Brandy Station, Virginia, February 1864.

The Union Army moved ponderously slowly toward their new positions and Meade lashed out at Maj. Gen. Philip Sheridan and his cavalry corps blaming them for not clearing the road and not informing Meade of the enemy's movements.[108] Grant had brought Sheridan with him from the Western Theater and he found the Army of the Potomac's cavalry corps run down and in poor discipline. Meade and Sheridan clashed over the use of cavalry since the Army of the Potomac had historically used cavalry as couriers, scouting and headquarters guards.[109] Sheridan told Meade that he could "whip Stuart" if Meade let him. Meade reported the conversation to Grant thinking he would reprimand the insubordinate Sheridan,[108] but he replied, "Well, he generally knows what he is talking about. Let him start right out and do it."[110] Meade deferred to Grant's judgment and issued orders to Sheridan to "proceed against the enemy's cavalry" and from May 9 through May 24, sent him on a raid toward Richmond, directly challenging the Confederate cavalry.[111] Sheridan's cavalry had great success, they broke up the Confederate supply lines, liberated hundreds of Union prisoners, mortally wounded Confederate General J.E.B. Stuart and threatened the city of Richmond.[112] However, his departure left the Union Army blind to enemy movements.[113]

Grant made his headquarters with Meade for the remainder of the war, which caused Meade to chafe at the close supervision he received. A newspaper reported the Army of the Potomac was, "directed by Grant, commanded by Meade, and led by Hancock, Sedgwick and Warren."[114] Following an incident in June 1864, in which Meade disciplined reporter Edward Cropsey from The Philadelphia Inquirer newspaper for an unfavorable article, all of the press assigned to his army agreed to mention Meade only in conjunction with setbacks. Meade apparently knew nothing of this arrangement, and the reporters giving all of the credit to Grant angered Meade.[115]

Additional differences caused further friction between Grant and Meade. Waging a war of attrition in the Overland Campaign against Lee, Grant was willing to suffer previously unacceptable losses with the knowledge that the Union Army had replacement soldiers available, whereas the Confederates did not.[116] Meade was opposed to Grant's recommendations to directly attack fortified Confederate positions which resulted in huge losses of Union soldiers.[117] Grant became frustrated with Meade's cautious approach and despite his initial promise to allow Meade latitude in his command, Grant began to override Meade and order the tactical deployment of the Army of the Potomac.[118]

Meade became frustrated with his lack of autonomy and his performance as a military leader suffered.[119] During the Battle of Cold Harbor, Meade inadequately coordinated the disastrous frontal assault.[120] However, Meade took some satisfaction that Grant's overconfidence at the start of the campaign against Lee had been reduced after the brutal confrontation of the Overland Campaign and stated, "I think Grant has had his eyes opened, and is willing to admit now that Virginia and Lee's army is not Tennessee and [Braxton] Bragg's army."[121]

After the Battle of Spotsylvania Court House, Grant requested that Meade be promoted to major general of the regular army. In a telegram to Secretary of War Edwin Stanton on May 13, 1864, Grant stated that "Meade has more than met my most sanguine expectations. He and [William T.] Sherman are the fittest officers for large commands I have come in contact with."[122][123] Meade felt slighted that his promotion was processed after that of Sherman and Sheridan, the latter his subordinate.[124][125] The U.S. Senate confirmed Sherman and Sheridan on January 13, 1865, Meade on February 1. Subsequently, Sheridan was promoted to lieutenant general over Meade on March 4, 1869, after Grant became president and Sherman became the commanding general of the U.S. Army. However, his date of rank meant that he was outranked at the end of the war only by Grant, Halleck, and Sherman.[126]

Richmond-Petersburg campaign edit

Meade and the Army of the Potomac crossed the James River to attack the strategic supply route centered on Petersburg, Virginia. They probed the defenses of the city and Meade wrote, "We find the enemy, as usual, in a very strong position, defended by earthworks, and it looks very much as if we will have to go through a siege of Petersburg before entering on a siege of Richmond."[127]

An opportunity opened up to lead the Army of the Shenandoah, to protect Washington D.C. against the raids of Jubal Early. Meade wanted the role to free himself from under Grant; however, the position was given to Sheridan. When Meade asked Grant why it did not go to himself, the more experienced officer, Grant stated that Lincoln did not want to take Meade away from the Army of the Potomac and imply that his leadership was substandard.[128]

During the Siege of Petersburg, he approved the plan of Maj. Gen. Ambrose Burnside to plant explosives in a mine shaft dug underneath the Confederate line east of Petersburg, but at the last minute he changed Burnside's plan to lead the attack with a well-trained African-American division that was highly drilled just for this action, instructing him to take a politically less risky course and substitute an untrained and poorly led white division. The resulting Battle of the Crater was one of the great fiascoes of the war.[129]

 
General Meade and other generals of Army of the Potomac in Washington, D.C., June 1865

Although he fought during the Appomattox Campaign, Grant and Sheridan received most of the credit and Meade was not present when Lee surrendered at Appomattox Court House.[115]

With the war over, the Army of the Potomac was disbanded on June 28, 1865, and Meade's command of it ended.[130]

Political rivalries edit

Many of the political rivalries in the Army of the Potomac stemmed from opposition to the politically conservative, full-time officers from West Point. Meade was a Douglas Democrat and saw the preservation of the Union as the war's true goal and only opposed slavery as it threatened to tear the Union apart. He was a supporter of McClellan, the previously removed commander of the Army of the Potomac, and was politically aligned with him.[131] Other McClellan loyalists who advocated a more moderate prosecution of the war, such as Charles P. Stone and Fitz John Porter, were arrested and court-martialed.[96] When Meade was awakened in the middle of the night and informed that he was given command of the Army of the Potomac, he later wrote to his wife that he assumed that Army politics had caught up with him and he was being arrested.[132]

Meade's short temper earned him notoriety, and while he was respected by most of his peers and trusted by the men in his army, he did not inspire them.[133][134] While Meade could be sociable, intellectual and courteous in normal times, the stress of war made him prickly and abrasive and earned him the nickname "Old Snapping Turtle".[135] He was prone to bouts of anger and rashness and was paranoid about political enemies coming after him.[136]

His political enemies included Daniel Butterfield, Abner Doubleday, Joseph Hooker, Alfred Pleasonton and Daniel Sickles.[137] Sickles had developed a personal vendetta against Meade because of Sickles's allegiance to Hooker, whom Meade had replaced, and because of controversial disagreements at Gettysburg. Sickles had either mistakenly or deliberately disregarded Meade's orders about placing his III Corps in the defensive line,[138] which led to that corps' destruction and placed the entire army at risk on the second day of battle.[139]

Halleck, Meade's direct supervisor prior to Grant, was openly critical of Meade. Both Halleck and Lincoln pressured Meade to destroy Lee's army but gave no specifics as to how it should be done.[119] Radical Republicans, some of whom like Thaddeus Stevens were former Know Nothings and hostile to Irish Catholics like Meade's family, in the Joint Committee on the Conduct of the War suspected that Meade was a Copperhead and tried in vain to relieve him from command.[115] Sickles testified to the committee that Meade wanted to retreat his position at Gettysburg before the fighting started.[140] The joint committee did not remove Meade from command of the Army of the Potomac.[76]

Reconstruction edit

In July 1865, Meade assumed command of the Military Division of the Atlantic headquartered in Philadelphia. On January 6, 1868, he took command of the Third Military District in Atlanta. In January 1868, he assumed command of the Department of the South. The formation of the state governments of Alabama, Florida, Georgia, North Carolina and South Carolina for reentry into the United States was completed under his direct supervision. When the Governor of Georgia refused to accept the Reconstruction Acts of Congress, Meade replaced him with General Thomas H. Ruger.[141]

After the Camilla massacre in September 1868, caused by anger from white southerners over blacks gaining the right to vote in the 1868 Georgia state constitution, Meade investigated the event and decided to leave the punishment in the hands of civil authorities. Meade returned to command of the Military Division of the Atlantic in Philadelphia.[142]

In 1869, following Grant's inauguration as president and William Tecumseh Sherman's assignment to general-in-chief, Sheridan was promoted over Meade to lieutenant general.[143] Meade effectively served in semi-retirement as the commander of the Military Division of the Atlantic from his home in Philadelphia.[144]

Personal life edit

On December 31, 1840 (his birthday), he married Margaretta Sergeant,[145] daughter of John Sergeant, running mate of Henry Clay in the 1832 presidential election.[10] They had seven children together: John Sergeant Meade, George Meade, Margaret Butler Meade, Spencer Meade, Sarah Wise Meade, Henrietta Meade, and William Meade.[146]

His notable descendants include:

Later life and death edit

 
Meade's tombstone in Laurel Hill Cemetery

Meade was presented with a gold medal from the Union League of Philadelphia in recognition for his success at Gettysburg.[150]

Meade was a commissioner of Fairmount Park in Philadelphia from 1866 until his death. The city of Philadelphia gave Meade's wife a house at 1836 Delancey Place in which he lived also. The building still has the name "Meade" over the door, but is now used as apartments.[151]

Meade received an honorary doctorate in law (LL.D.) from Harvard University,[152] and his scientific achievements were recognized by various institutions, including the American Philosophical Society and the Philadelphia Academy of Natural Sciences.[34][115][153]

Having long suffered from complications caused by his war wounds, Meade died on November 6, 1872, in the house at 1836 Delancey Place, from pneumonia.[151] He was buried at Laurel Hill Cemetery.[154][155]

Legacy edit

 
Meade's likeness was used on the one-thousand dollar Treasury note in 1890

Meade has been memorialized with several statues including an equestrian statue at Gettysburg National Military Park by Henry Kirke Bush-Brown;[156] the George Gordon Meade Memorial statue by Charles Grafly,[157] in front of the E. Barrett Prettyman United States Courthouse in Washington, D.C.;[158] an equestrian statue by Alexander Milne Calder; and one by Daniel Chester French atop the Smith Memorial Arch, both in Fairmount Park in Philadelphia.[159] A bronze bust of Meade by Boris Blai was placed at Barnegat Lighthouse in 1957.[160]

The United States Army's Fort George G. Meade in Fort Meade, Maryland, is named for him, as are Meade County, Kansas; Fort Meade, Florida; Fort Meade National Cemetery; and Meade County, South Dakota.[161] The Grand Army of the Republic Meade Post #1 founded in Philadelphia in 1866 was named in his honor.[162]

The General Meade Society was created to "promote and preserve the memory of Union Major General George Meade".[163] Members gather in Laurel Hill Cemetery on December 31 to recognize his birthday.[151] The Old Baldy Civil War Round Table in Philadelphia is named in honor of Meade's horse during the war.[164] In World War II, the United States liberty ship SS George G. Meade was named in his honor.

One-thousand-dollar Treasury Note, also called Coin notes, of the Series 1890 and 1891, feature portraits of Meade on the obverse. The 1890 Series note is called the Grand Watermelon Note by collectors, because the large zeroes on the reverse resemble the pattern on a watermelon.[165]

The preserved head of Old Baldy, Meade's wartime horse, was donated to the Civil War Museum of Philadelphia by the Grand Army of the Republic Museum in 1979.[166]

Memorials to Meade edit

In popular culture edit

Meade has been portrayed in several films and television shows:

Meade is a character in the 2003 alternate history novel Gettysburg: A Novel of the Civil War, written by Newt Gingrich and William Forstchen

Dates of rank edit

Insignia Rank Date Component
No insignia Cadet, USMA September 1, 1831 Regular Army
  Second Lieutenant July 1, 1835 (brevet)
December 31, 1835 (permanent)
Regular Army
  First Lieutenant September 23, 1846 (brevet)
August 4, 1851 (permanent)
Regular Army
  Captain May 19, 1856 Regular Army
  Brigadier General August 31, 1861 Volunteers
  Major June 18, 1862 Regular Army
  Major General November 29, 1862 Volunteers
  Brigadier General July 3, 1863 Regular Army
  Major General August 18, 1864 Regular Army

[169][170]

See also edit

References edit

Citations

  1. ^ Warner 1964, p. 315.
  2. ^ a b Huntington 2013, p. 11.
  3. ^ Baltzell, Edward Digby (1958). Philadelphia Gentlemen: The Making of a National Upper Class. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. p. 142. ISBN 978-0-88738-789-0. Retrieved February 6, 2023.
  4. ^ a b Huntington 2013, p. 12.
  5. ^ Cleaves 1960, p. 9.
  6. ^ Sauers 2003, p. 4.
  7. ^ Cleaves 1960, pp. 9–10.
  8. ^ Pennypacker 1901, p. 13.
  9. ^ Pennypacker 1901, p. 12.
  10. ^ a b Huntington 2013, p. 13.
  11. ^ a b Hyde 2003, p. 15.
  12. ^ Cleaves 1960, p. 12.
  13. ^ a b Sauers 2003, p. 5.
  14. ^ Cleaves 1960, pp. 13–14.
  15. ^ Cleaves 1960, p. 15.
  16. ^ Cleaves 1960, pp. 15–16.
  17. ^ Cleaves 1960, pp. 16–17.
  18. ^ Cleaves 1960, p. 18.
  19. ^ Huntington 2013, pp. 13–14.
  20. ^ Sauers 2003, p. 6.
  21. ^ Cleaves 1960, p. 19.
  22. ^ Cleaves 1960, pp. 38–39.
  23. ^ Cleaves 1960, pp. 26–27.
  24. ^ Cleaves 1960, pp. 27–28.
  25. ^ a b c d Warner 1964, p. 316.
  26. ^ Sauers 2003, p. 9.
  27. ^ Cleaves 1960, p. 45.
  28. ^ Cleaves 1960, p. 46.
  29. ^ Cleaves 1960, p. 47.
  30. ^ Cleaves 1960, p. 48.
  31. ^ Dean, Love, Reef Lights: Seaswept Lighthouses of the Florida Keys, The Historic Key West Preservation Board, 1982, ISBN 0-943528-03-8. McCarthy, Kevin M., Florida Lighthouses. University of Florida Press, 1990, ISBN 0-8130-0993-6.
  32. ^ a b Sauers 2003, p. 11.
  33. ^ Cleaves 1960, p. 49.
  34. ^ a b Eicher & Eicher 2001, p. 385.
  35. ^ Woodford 1991, p. 37.
  36. ^ Woodford 1991, p. 40.
  37. ^ Woodford 1991, p. 41.
  38. ^ Pennypacker 1901, p. 22.
  39. ^ Hyde 2003, p. 16.
  40. ^ Cleaves 1960, p. 55.
  41. ^ Cleaves 1960, p. 61.
  42. ^ Cleaves 1960, pp. 62–63.
  43. ^ Pennypacker 1901, pp. 32–33.
  44. ^ Pennypacker 1901, p. 49.
  45. ^ Cleaves 1960, p. 68.
  46. ^ Cleaves 1960, p. 69.
  47. ^ Brown 2021, p. 7.
  48. ^ Pennypacker 1901, p. 70.
  49. ^ Pennypacker 1901, p. 83.
  50. ^ Pennypacker 1901, pp. 71–74.
  51. ^ Tagg 1998, p. 2.
  52. ^ Brown 2021, pp. 7–8.
  53. ^ Pennypacker 1901, pp. 85–87.
  54. ^ Pennypacker 1901, p. 91.
  55. ^ a b c Brown 2021, p. 8.
  56. ^ Huntington 2013, p. 106.
  57. ^ Pennypacker 1901, p. 108.
  58. ^ Brown 2021, p. 6.
  59. ^ Brown 2021, p. 14.
  60. ^ Gallagher 1999, p. 136.
  61. ^ Brown 2021, p. 4.
  62. ^ Brown 2021, p. 25.
  63. ^ Schroeder, Patrick. "Joseph Hooker (1814-1879)". www.encyclopediavirginia.com. Virginia Humanities. Retrieved February 14, 2023.
  64. ^ Pennypacker 1901, p. 130.
  65. ^ Hyde 2003, p. 18.
  66. ^ Tagg 1998, pp. 2–3.
  67. ^ Coddington 1997, p. 210.
  68. ^ Pennypacker 1901, p. 1.
  69. ^ Chick 2015, p. 10.
  70. ^ a b Hall 2003, p. 75.
  71. ^ a b c Tagg 1998.
  72. ^ Hall 2003, p. 167.
  73. ^ Gallagher 1999, p. 144.
  74. ^ Tagg 1998, pp. 4–6.
  75. ^ Brown 2021, p. 5.
  76. ^ a b "General George Meade's Forgotten Council of War". www.nps.gov. National Park Service United States Department of the Interior. Retrieved March 21, 2023.
  77. ^ "The War of the Rebellion: a compilation of the official records of the Union and Confederate armies". Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA. Retrieved March 6, 2023.
  78. ^ Hall 2003, p. 264.
  79. ^ a b Chick 2015, p. 11.
  80. ^ Hyde 2003, p. 25.
  81. ^ Hall 2003, p. 259.
  82. ^ Warner 1964, pp. 316–317.
  83. ^ The Centennial of the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York. Washington: Government Printing Office. 1904. p. 503. Retrieved March 11, 2023.
  84. ^ Meade, George (1913). The Life and Letters of George Gordon Meade Major-General United States Army. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. p. 154. Retrieved February 8, 2023.
  85. ^ Pennypacker 1901, pp. 223–224.
  86. ^ Backus & Orrison 2015, pp. 2–3.
  87. ^ Backus & Orrison 2015, pp. 3–4.
  88. ^ Backus & Orrison 2015, p. 4.
  89. ^ Backus & Orrison 2015, p. 11.
  90. ^ Backus & Orrison 2015, p. 13.
  91. ^ Backus & Orrison 2015, p. 16.
  92. ^ Pennypacker 1901, p. 234.
  93. ^ Backus & Orrison 2015, p. xx.
  94. ^ Chick 2015, pp. 15–16.
  95. ^ "Mine Run Payne's Farm". www.battlefields.org. American Battlefield Trust. Retrieved March 13, 2023.
  96. ^ a b Chick 2015, p. 16.
  97. ^ Salmon 2001, p. 226.
  98. ^ Dunkerly, Pfanz & Ruth 2014, pp. xxi–xxii.
  99. ^ Chick 2015, p. 17.
  100. ^ Rafuse, Ethan S. "George Gordon Meade (1815-1872)". www.encyclopediavirginia.com. Virginia Humanities. Retrieved February 14, 2023.
  101. ^ Rhea 2000, p. 10.
  102. ^ Chick 2015, p. 20.
  103. ^ Dunkerly, Pfanz & Ruth 2014, p. 2.
  104. ^ Hogan 2014, p. 17.
  105. ^ Hogan 2014, p. 18.
  106. ^ Hogan 2014, p. 19.
  107. ^ Hogan 2014, pp. 26–27.
  108. ^ a b Hogan 2014, p. 30.
  109. ^ Rhea 2000, p. 36.
  110. ^ Rhea 2000, p. 37.
  111. ^ Coffey, David (2005). Sheridan's Lieutenants: Phil Sheridan, His Generals, and the Final Year of the Civil War. Lanham, Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc. p. 22. ISBN 0-7425-4306-4. Retrieved March 14, 2023.
  112. ^ Rhea 2000, p. 35.
  113. ^ Hogan 2014, p. 47.
  114. ^ Dunkerly, Pfanz & Ruth 2014, p. 7.
  115. ^ a b c d Heidler & Heidler 2002, p. 1296.
  116. ^ Rhea 2000, p. 19.
  117. ^ Hess, Earl J. (2007). Trench Warfare Under Grant & Lee - Field Fortifications in the Overland Campaign. Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press. p. 164. ISBN 978-0-8078-3154-0. Retrieved March 15, 2023.
  118. ^ Rhea 2000, p. 14.
  119. ^ a b Chick 2015, p. 15.
  120. ^ Hogan 2014, pp. 63–65.
  121. ^ Trudeau 1991, p. 33.
  122. ^ Huntington 2013, p. 277.
  123. ^ Grant, chapter LII (vol. II, p. 235). He further stated that "I would not like to see one of these promotions at this time without seeing both."
  124. ^ Eicher & Eicher 2001, p. 703.
  125. ^ Warner, p. 644. Sherman was appointed on August 12, 1864, and confirmed on December 12 with date of rank August 12. Sheridan was appointed November 14 with date of rank November 8. Meade was not appointed until November 26, although his date of rank was established as August 18, meaning he technically outranked Sheridan, but was embarrassed that his name was not put forward first.
  126. ^ Eicher & Eicher 2001, pp. 701–702.
  127. ^ Trudeau 1991, p. 48.
  128. ^ Trudeau 1991, p. 141.
  129. ^ Wolfe, Brendan. "Crater, Battle of the". www.encyclopediavirginia.com. Virginia Humanities. Retrieved March 23, 2023.
  130. ^ Huntington 2013, p. 350.
  131. ^ Chick 2015, pp. 13–14.
  132. ^ Coddington 1997, p. 209.
  133. ^ Tagg 1998, pp. 1–4.
  134. ^ Heidler & Heidler 2002, p. 1295.
  135. ^ "General George Meade Equestrian Statue". www.nps.gov. National Park Service United States Department of the Interior. Retrieved March 23, 2023.
  136. ^ Chick 2015, pp. 16–17.
  137. ^ Chick 2015, pp. 12–13.
  138. ^ Hall 2003, p. 98.
  139. ^ Sears, Stephen W. (1999). Controversies & Commanders: Dispatches from the Army of the Potomac. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company. pp. 215–222. ISBN 978-0-618-05706-1. Retrieved February 8, 2023.
  140. ^ Coddington 1997, p. 339.
  141. ^ Pennypacker 1901, p. 389.
  142. ^ Pennypacker 1901, p. 390.
  143. ^ Warner 1964, p. 644.
  144. ^ Cole, Arthur C.; Meade, George; Meade, George Gordon (March 1915). "The Life and Letters of George Gordon Meade, Major-General United States Army". The Mississippi Valley Historical Review. 1 (4): 296–301. doi:10.2307/1886971. ISSN 0161-391X. JSTOR 1886971.
  145. ^ Cleaves 1960, p. 17.
  146. ^ The Pennsylvania magazine of history and biography. Philadelphia: The Historical Society of Pennsylvania. 1900. p. 243. Retrieved February 28, 2023.
  147. ^ "Visitors didn't stand a 'ghost of a chance': George G. Meade Easby, a one-of-a-kind Hiller" August 12, 2010, at the Wayback Machine, Chestnut Hill Local, December 15, 2005.
  148. ^ Weaber, Gerald (November 2009). "Fascinating Fitlers among the movers and shakers since Riverton's early days" (PDF). Gaslight News. Historical Society of Riverton. XXXIX (4): 5. Retrieved October 9, 2018.
  149. ^ Sharp, Nathan (July 14, 2020). "10 Things You Didn't Know About the Cast of Lost". www.thethings.com. Retrieved February 8, 2023.
  150. ^ Hyde 2003, p. 17.
  151. ^ a b c Kyriakodis, Harry (August 7, 2015). "Forgotten And Alone: Bring Old Baldy And the General Into Town". www.hiddencityphila.org. Hidden City Philadelphia. Retrieved March 7, 2023.
  152. ^ Pennypacker 1901, p. 391.
  153. ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved April 27, 2021.
  154. ^ Eicher & Eicher 2001, p. 384.
  155. ^ "The Soldier's Rest.; Obsequies of Gen. Meade in Philadelphia" (PDF). The New York Times. November 11, 1872.
  156. ^ "Henry Kirke Brown: The Father of American Sculpture". www.library.udel.edu. University of Delaware. Retrieved February 9, 2023.
  157. ^ Scott, Gary (September 19, 1977). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form – Civil War Monuments in Washington, D.C." National Park Service. Retrieved February 20, 2015.
  158. ^ "Major General George Gordon Meade Monument". www.historicsites.dcpreservation.org. DC Preservation League. Retrieved February 9, 2023.
  159. ^ "Smith Memorial Arch (1897 – 1912)". www.associationforpublicart.org. Association for Public Art. Retrieved February 9, 2023.
  160. ^ Huntington 2013, p. 32.
  161. ^ Federal Writers' Project (1940). South Dakota place-names, v.1-3. University of South Dakota. p. 38. Archived from the original on June 6, 2016.
  162. ^ Waskie, Andy (July 7, 2021). "Story of the G.A.R. Post #2 'Army Mule'". www.generalmeadesociety.org. The General Meade Society of Philadelphia, Inc. Retrieved February 9, 2023.
  163. ^ "General Meade Society - Mission Statement". www.generalmeadesociety.org. The General Meade Society of Philadelphia, Inc. March 11, 2015. Retrieved February 9, 2023.
  164. ^ "Old Baldy Civil War Round Table of Philadelphia". www.oldbaldycwrt.org. South Bay CWRT. Retrieved February 9, 2023.
  165. ^ "Grand Watermelon Note". www.atlantafed.org. Retrieved February 9, 2023.
  166. ^ Rosenheck, Mabel. "Civil War Museum of Philadelphia". www.philadelphiaencyclopedia.org. The Encyclopedia of Greater Philadelphia. Retrieved February 9, 2023.
  167. ^ Nickels, Thom (2014). Legendary Local of Center City Philadelphia Pennsylvania. Charleston, South Carolina: Arcadia Publishing. p. 17. ISBN 978-1-4671-0141-7. Retrieved March 7, 2023.
  168. ^ Melas, Chloe (December 27, 2021). "Tom Hanks makes cameo in '1883'". CNN. Retrieved March 9, 2022.
  169. ^ Cullum, George W. (1891). Biographical register of the officers and graduates of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, N.Y., from its establishment in 1802 to 1890. Vol. I (3rd ed.). Boston: Houghton Mifflin. pp. 601–609.
  170. ^ Official Army Register for January 1871. Washington: Adjutant General's Office. 1871. p. 3.

Sources

  • Backus, Bill; Orrison, Robert (2015). A Want of Vigilance: The Bristoe Station Campaign October 9-19, 1863. Savas Beatie. ISBN 978-1-61121-300-3.
  • Brown, Kent Masterson (2021). Meade at Gettysburg: A Study in Command. The University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-1-4696-6200-8.
  • Chick, Sean Michael (2015). The Battle of Petersburg, June 15-18, 1864. Potomac Books. ISBN 978-1-61234-737-0.
  • Cleaves, Freeman (1960). Meade of Gettysburg. University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 0-8061-2298-6.
  • Coddington, Edwin B. (1997). The Gettysburg Campaign: A Study in Command. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0-684-84569-2.
  • Davis, William C. (1986). Death in the Trenches: Grant at Petersburg - Volume 22 of Civil War. Time-Life Books. ISBN 978-0-809-44777-0.
  • Dunkerly, Robert M.; Pfanz, Donald C.; Ruth, David R. (2014). No Turning Back: A Guide to the 1864 Overland Campaign, From the Wilderness to Cold Harbor, May 4 - June 13, 1864. Savas Beatie. ISBN 978-1-61121-193-1.
  • Eicher, John H.; Eicher, David J. (2001). Civil War High Commands. Stanford University Press. ISBN 0-8047-3641-3.
  • Gallagher, Gary W. (1999). Three Days at Gettysburg: Essays on Confederate and Union Leadership. Kent State University Press. ISBN 0-87338-629-9.
  • Grant, Ulysses S. (1885). Personal Memoirs of U.S. Grant. Charles L. Webster & Company.
  • Hall, Jeffrey C. (2003). The Stand of the U.S. Army at Gettysburg. Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-253-34258-9.
  • Heidler, David Stephen; Heidler, Jeanne T. (2002). Encyclopedia of the American Civil War: A Political, Social, and Military History. W.W. Norton. ISBN 978-0-3930-4758-5.
  • Hogan, David W. Jr. (2014). The Overland Campaign, 4 May - 15 June 1864. Center of Military History, United States Army. ISBN 978-0-16-092517-7.
  • Huntington, Tom (2013). Searching for George Gordon Meade: The Forgotten Victor of Gettysburg. Stackpole Books. ISBN 978-0-8117-0813-5.
  • Hyde, Bill (2003). The Union Generals Speak: The Meade Hearings on the Battle of Gettysburg. Louisiana State University Press. ISBN 0-8071-2581-4.
  • Jaynes, Gregory (1986). The Killing Ground: Wilderness to Cold Harbor - Volume 1 of Civil War. Time-Life Books. ISBN 978-0-809-44768-8.
  • Pennypacker, Isaac Rusling (1901). General Meade. D. Appleton and Company. ISBN 978-0-7222-9257-0.
  • Rhea, Gordon C. (2000). To the North Anna River: Grant and Lee, May 13–25, 1864. Louisiana State University Press. ISBN 978-0-8071-3111-4.
  • Salmon, John S. (2001). The Official Virginia Civil War Battlefield Guide. Stackpole Books. ISBN 0-8117-2868-4.
  • Sauers, Richard A. (2003). Meade: Victor of Gettysburg. Potomac Books Inc. ISBN 1-57488-418-2.
  • Schmutz, John F. (2009). The Battle of the Crater: A Complete History. McFarland & Company, Inc. ISBN 978-0-7864-3982-9.
  • Tagg, Larry (1998). The Generals of Gettysburg - The Leaders of America's Greatest Battle. Da Capo Press. ISBN 978-0-306-81242-2.
  • Trudeau, Noah Andre (1991). The Last Citadel - Petersburg June 1864 - April 1865. Savas Beatie. ISBN 978-1-61121-212-9.
  • Warner, Ezra J. (1964). Generals in Blue: Lives of the Union Commanders. Louisiana State University Press. ISBN 0-8071-0822-7.
  • Woodford, Arthur M. (1991). Charting the Inland Seas: A History of the U.S. Lake Survey. Wayne State University Press. ISBN 0-8143-2499-1.

Further reading

  • Brown, Canter Jr. (1991). (PDF). South Florida History Magazine. No. 2. pp. 8–11. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 13, 2016. Retrieved November 18, 2017 – via HistoryMiami.
  • Hunt, Harrison. Heroes of the Civil War. New York: Military Press, 1990. ISBN 0-517-01739-3.
  • Sears, Stephen W. Gettysburg. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 2003. ISBN 0-395-86761-4.
  • Stowe, Christopher S. "A Philadelphia Gentleman: the Cultural, Institutional, and Political Socialization of George Gordon Meade". PhD diss., University of Toledo, 2005.

External links edit

  • The George G. Meade collection, including papers covering all aspects of his career, are available for research use at the Historical Society of Pennsylvania.
  • General Meade Society of Philadelphia
  • at the Wayback Machine (archived February 8, 2008)
Military offices
Preceded by Commander of the I Corps (Army of the Potomac)
September 17, 1862 – September 29, 1862
Succeeded by
Preceded by Commander of the Fifth Army Corps
December 25, 1862 – January 26, 1863
Succeeded by
Preceded by Commander of the Fifth Army Corps
February 5, 1863 – February 16, 1863
Succeeded by
Preceded by Commander of the Fifth Army Corps
February 28, 1863 – June 28, 1863
Succeeded by
Preceded by Commander of the Army of the Potomac
June 28, 1863 – June 28, 1865
Succeeded by
(none, end of Civil War)

george, meade, general, meade, redirects, here, other, uses, general, meade, disambiguation, other, people, named, disambiguation, george, gordon, meade, december, 1815, november, 1872, united, states, army, major, general, commanded, army, potomac, during, am. General Meade redirects here For other uses see General Meade disambiguation For other people named George Meade see George Meade disambiguation George Gordon Meade December 31 1815 November 6 1872 was a United States Army Major General who commanded the Army of the Potomac during the American Civil War from 1863 to 1865 He fought in many of the key battles of the Eastern theater and defeated the Confederate Army of Northern Virginia led by General Robert E Lee at the Battle of Gettysburg Major GeneralGeorge MeadeMeade portrait by Mathew BradyBirth nameGeorge Gordon MeadeNickname s Old Snapping Turtle Born 1815 12 31 December 31 1815Cadiz SpainDiedNovember 6 1872 1872 11 06 aged 56 Philadelphia Pennsylvania U S BuriedLaurel Hill Cemetery PhiladelphiaAllegiance United States of AmericaService wbr branchUnited States ArmyYears of service1835 18361842 1872RankMajor General USA Commands heldUnited States Lake SurveyI CorpsV CorpsArmy of the PotomacMilitary Division of the AtlanticDepartment of the SouthThird Military DistrictBattles warsSecond Seminole War Mexican American War Battle of Palo Alto Battle of Resaca de la Palma Battle of Monterrey American Civil War Battle of Gaines Mill Battle of Glendale Second Battle of Bull Run Battle of South Mountain Battle of Antietam Battle of Fredericksburg Mud March Battle of Chancellorsville Battle of Gettysburg Bristoe Campaign Mine Run Campaign Overland Campaign Richmond Petersburg Campaign Appomattox CampaignHe was born in Cadiz Spain to a wealthy Philadelphia merchant family and graduated from the United States Military Academy in 1835 He fought in the Second Seminole War and the Mexican American War He served in the United States Army Corps of Topographical Engineers and led construction of lighthouses in Florida and New Jersey from 1851 to 1856 and the United States Lake Survey from 1857 to 1861 His Civil War service began as brigadier general with the Pennsylvania Reserves building defenses around Washington D C He fought in the Peninsula Campaign and the Seven Days Battles He was severely wounded at the Battle of Glendale and returned to lead his brigade at the Second Battle of Bull Run As a division commander he had success at the Battle of South Mountain and assumed temporary command of the I Corps at the Battle of Antietam Meade s division broke through the lines at the Battle of Fredericksburg but were forced to retreat due to lack of support Meade was promoted to major general and commander of the V Corps which he led during the Battle of Chancellorsville He was appointed to command the Army of the Potomac just three days before the Battle of Gettysburg and arrived on the battlefield after the first day s action on July 1 1863 He organized his forces on favorable ground to fight an effective defensive battle against Robert E Lee s Army of Northern Virginia and repelled a series of massive assaults throughout the next two days While elated about the victory President Abraham Lincoln was critical of Meade due to his perception of an ineffective pursuit during the retreat which allowed Lee and his army to escape back to Virginia Meade s troops had a minor victory in the Bristoe Campaign but a stalemate at the Battle of Mine Run Meade s cautious approach prompted Lincoln to look for a new commander of the Army of the Potomac In 1864 1865 Meade continued to command the Army of the Potomac through the Overland Campaign the Richmond Petersburg Campaign and the Appomattox Campaign but he was overshadowed by the direct supervision of the general in chief Lt Gen Ulysses S Grant who accompanied him throughout these campaigns Grant conducted most of the strategy during these campaigns leaving Meade with significantly less influence than before After the war Meade commanded the Military Division of the Atlantic from 1865 to 1866 and again from 1869 to 1872 He oversaw the formation of the state governments and reentry into the United States for five southern states through his command of the Department of the South from 1866 to 1868 and the Third Military District in 1872 Meade was subjected to intense political rivalries within the Army notably with Major Gen Daniel Sickles who tried to discredit Meade s role in the victory at Gettysburg He had a notoriously short temper which earned him the nickname of Old Snapping Turtle Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Topographical Corps and Mexican American War 3 American Civil War 3 1 Peninsula campaign 3 2 Maryland campaign 3 3 Fredericksburg and Chancellorsville 3 4 Gettysburg campaign 3 4 1 Command of the Army of the Potomac 3 4 2 Battle of Gettysburg 3 4 3 Lee s retreat 3 5 Bristoe and Mine Run campaign 3 6 Overland campaign 3 7 Richmond Petersburg campaign 3 8 Political rivalries 4 Reconstruction 5 Personal life 6 Later life and death 7 Legacy 7 1 Memorials to Meade 8 In popular culture 9 Dates of rank 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksEarly life and education editMeade was born on December 31 1815 in Cadiz Spain 1 the eighth of ten children of Richard Worsam Meade and Margaret Coats Butler 2 His great grandfather Irishman Robert Meade father of George Meade was a wealthy merchant and land speculator in Philadelphia 3 His father was wealthy due to Spanish American trade and was appointed U S naval agent 2 He was ruined financially because of his support of Spain in the Peninsular War his family returned to the United States in 1817 in precarious financial straits 4 Meade attended elementary school in Philadelphia 5 and the American Classical and Military Lyceum a private school in Philadelphia modeled after the U S Military Academy at West Point 6 His father died in 1828 when George was 12 years old 4 and he was taken out of the Germantown military academy George was placed in a school run by Salmon P Chase in Washington D C however it closed after a few months due to Chase s other obligations He was then placed in the Mount Hope Institution in Baltimore Maryland 7 Meade entered the United States Military Academy at West Point on July 1 1831 8 He would have preferred to attend college and study law and did not enjoy his time at West Point 9 He graduated 19th in his class of 56 cadets in 1835 10 He was uninterested in the details of military dress and drills and accumulated 168 demerits only 32 short of the amount that would trigger a mandatory dismissal 11 Topographical Corps and Mexican American War edit nbsp Meade photographed by Mathew Brady or Levin C HandyMeade was commissioned a brevet second lieutenant in the 3rd Artillery 12 He worked for a summer as an assistant surveyor on the construction of the Long Island Railroad and was assigned to service in Florida 13 He fought in the Second Seminole War 14 and was assigned to accompany a group of Seminole to Indian territory in the West 13 He became a full second lieutenant by year s end and in the fall of 1836 after the minimum required one year of service 11 he resigned from the army He returned to Florida and worked as a private citizen for his brother in law James Duncan Graham as an assistant surveyor to the United States Army Corps of Topographical Engineers on a railroad project 15 He conducted additional survey work for the Topographical Engineers on the Texas Louisiana border the Mississippi River Delta 16 and the northeastern boundary of Maine and Canada 17 In 1842 a congressional measure was passed which excluded civilians from working in the Army Corps of Topographical Engineers 18 and Meade reentered the army as a second lieutenant in order to continue his work with them 19 In November 1843 he was assigned to work on lighthouse construction under Major Hartman Bache He worked on the Brandywine Shoal lighthouse in the Delaware Bay 20 Meade served in the Mexican American War and was assigned to the staffs of Generals Zachary Taylor 21 and Robert Patterson 22 He fought at the Battle of Palo Alto 23 the Battle of Resaca de la Palma 24 and the Battle of Monterrey 25 He served under General William Worth at Monterrey and led a party up a hill to attack a fortified position 26 He was brevetted to first lieutenant 25 and received a gold mounted sword for gallantry from the citizens of Philadelphia 27 In 1849 Meade was assigned to Fort Brooke in Florida to assist with Seminole attacks on settlements 28 In 1851 he led the construction of the Carysfort Reef Light in Key Largo 29 In 1852 the Topographical Corps established the United States Lighthouse Board and Meade was appointed the Seventh District engineer with responsibilities in Florida He led the construction of Sand Key Light in Key West 30 Jupiter Inlet Light in Jupiter Florida and Sombrero Key Light in the Florida Keys 31 When Bache was reassigned to the West Coast Meade took over responsibility for the Fourth District in New Jersey and Delaware 32 and built the Barnegat Light on Long Beach Island 33 Absecon Light in Atlantic City and the Cape May Light in Cape May He also designed a hydraulic lamp that was used in several American lighthouses Meade received an official promotion to first lieutenant in 1851 32 and to captain in 1856 34 In 1857 Meade was given command of the Lakes Survey mission of the Great Lakes Completion of the survey of Lake Huron and extension of the surveys of Lake Michigan down to Grand and Little Traverse Bays were done under his command 35 Prior to Captain Meade s command Great Lakes water level readings were taken locally with temporary gauges a uniform plane of reference had not been established In 1858 based on his recommendation instrumentation was set in place for the tabulation of records across the basin 36 Meade stayed with the Lakes Survey until the 1861 outbreak of the Civil War 37 American Civil War editMeade was appointed brigadier general of volunteers on August 31 1861 38 a few months after the start of the American Civil War based on the strong recommendation of Pennsylvania Governor Andrew Curtin 39 He was assigned command of the 2nd Brigade of the Pennsylvania Reserves under General George A McCall 40 The Pennsylvania Reserves were initially assigned to the construction of defenses around Washington D C 25 Peninsula campaign edit Main article Peninsula campaign In March 1862 the Army of the Potomac was reorganized into four corps 41 Meade served as part of the I Corps under Maj Gen Irvin McDowell 25 The I Corps was stationed in the Rappahannock area but in June the Pennsylvania Reserves were detached and sent to the Peninsula to reinforce the main army 42 With the onset of the Seven Days Battles on June 25 the Reserves were directly involved in the fighting At Mechanicsville and Gaines Mill Meade s brigade was mostly held in reserve 43 but at Glendale on June 30 the brigade was in the middle of a fierce battle His brigade lost 1 400 men 44 and Meade was shot in the right arm and through the back 45 He was sent home to Philadelphia to recuperate 46 Meade resumed command of his brigade in time for the Second Battle of Bull Run then assigned to Major General Irvin McDowell s corps of the Army of Virginia His brigade made a heroic stand on Henry House Hill to protect the rear of the retreating Union Army 47 Maryland campaign edit Main article Maryland campaign The division s commander John F Reynolds was sent to Harrisburg Pennsylvania to train militia units and Meade assumed temporary division command at the Battle of South Mountain 48 and the Battle of Antietam 49 Under Meade s command the division successfully attacked and captured a strategic position on high ground near Turner s Gap held by Robert E Rodes troops which forced the withdrawal of other Confederate troops 50 When Meade s troops stormed the heights the corps commander Joseph Hooker exclaimed Look at Meade Why with troops like those led in that way I can win anything 51 On September 17 1862 52 at Antietam Meade assumed temporary command of the I Corps and oversaw fierce combat after Hooker was wounded and requested Meade replace him 53 On September 29 1862 Reynolds returned from his service in Harrisburg Reynolds assumed command of the I Corps and Meade assumed command of the Third Division 54 Fredericksburg and Chancellorsville edit nbsp General Meade s horse Old BaldyOn November 5 1862 Ambrose Burnside replaced McClellan as commander of the Army of the Potomac Burnside gave command of the I Corps to Reynolds which frustrated Meade as he had more combat experience than Reynolds 55 Meade was promoted to major general of the Pennsylvania Reserves on November 29 1862 and given command of a division in the Left Grand Division under William B Franklin 55 During the Battle of Fredericksburg Meade s division made the only breakthrough of the Confederate lines spearheading through a gap in Lt Gen Thomas J Stonewall Jackson s corps at the southern end of the battlefield However his attack was not reinforced which resulted in the loss of much of his division 56 He led the Center Grand Division through the Mud March and stationed his troops on the banks of the Rappahanock 57 On December 22 1862 Meade replaced Daniel Butterfield in command of the V Corps which he led in the Battle of Chancellorsville On January 26 1863 Joseph Hooker assumed command of the Army of the Potomac 55 Hooker had grand plans for the Battle of Chancellorsville but was unsuccessful in execution allowing the Confederates to seize the initiative After the battle Meade wrote to his wife that General Hooker has disappointed all his friends by failing to show his fighting qualities in a pinch 58 Meade s corps was left in reserve for most of the battle contributing to the Union defeat Meade was among Hooker s commanders who argued to advance against Lee but Hooker chose to retreat 59 Meade learned afterward that Hooker misrepresented his position on the advance and confronted him All of Hooker s commanders supported Meade s position except Dan Sickles 60 Gettysburg campaign edit In June 1863 Lee took the initiative and moved his Army of Northern Virginia into Maryland and Pennsylvania 61 Hooker responded rapidly and positioned the Army of the Potomac between Lee s army and Washington D C However the relationship between the Lincoln administration and Hooker had deteriorated due to Hooker s poor performance at Chancellorsville 62 Hooker requested additional troops be assigned from Harper s Ferry to assist in the pursuit of Lee in the Gettysburg Campaign When Lincoln and General in Chief Henry Halleck refused Hooker resigned in protest 63 Command of the Army of the Potomac edit In the early morning hours of June 28 1863 a messenger from President Abraham Lincoln arrived to inform Meade of his appointment as Hooker s replacement 64 Upon being woken up he d assumed that army politics had caught up to him and that he was under arrest only to find that he d been given leadership of the Army of the Potomac He had not actively sought command and was not the president s first choice John F Reynolds one of four major generals who outranked Meade in the Army of the Potomac had earlier turned down the president s suggestion that he take over 65 Three corps commanders John Sedgwick Henry Slocum and Darius N Couch recommended Meade for command of the army and agreed to serve under him despite outranking him 66 While his colleagues were excited for the change in leadership the soldiers in the Army of Potomac were uncertain of Meade since his modesty lack of the theatrical and scholarly demeanor did not match their expectations for a General 67 Meade assumed command of the Army of the Potomac on June 28 1863 68 In a letter to his wife Meade wrote that command of the army was more likely to destroy one s reputation then to add to it 69 Battle of Gettysburg edit nbsp Engraving by James E Kelly of Meade and the Council of War July 2 1863Meade rushed the remainder of his army to Gettysburg and deployed his forces for a defensive battle 70 Meade was only four days into his leadership of the Army of the Potomac and informed his corps commanders that he would provide quick decisions and entrust them with the authority to carry out those orders the best way they saw fit He also made it clear that he was counting on the corps commanders to provide him with sound advice on strategy 70 Since Meade was new to high command he did not remain in headquarters but constantly moved about the battlefield issuing orders and ensuring that they were followed Meade gave orders for the Army of the Potomac to move forward in a broad front to prevent Lee from flanking them and threatening the cities of Baltimore and Washington D C He also issued a conditional plan for a retreat to Pipe Creek Maryland in case things went poorly for the Union By 6 pm on the evening of July 1 1863 Meade sent a telegram to Washington informing them of his decision to concentrate forces and make a stand at Gettysburg 71 On July 2 1863 Meade continued to monitor and maintain the placement of the troops He was outraged when he discovered that Daniel Sickles had moved his troops one mile forward to high ground without Meade s permission and left a gap in the line which threatened the right flank Meade recognized that Little Round Top was critical to maintaining the left flank He sent Warren to determine the status of the hill and quickly issued orders for the V Corps to occupy it when it was discovered empty Meade continued to reinforce the troops defending Little Round Top from Longstreet s advance and suffered the near destruction of thirteen brigades One questionable decision Meade made that day was to order Slocum s XII Corps to move from Culp s Hill to the left flank which allowed Confederate troops to temporarily capture it 71 On the evening of July 2 1863 Meade called a council of war consisting of his top generals The council reviewed the battle to date and agreed to keep fighting in a defensive position 72 nbsp General Meade s headquarters Gettysburg PennsylvaniaOn July 3 1863 Meade gave orders for the XII Corps and XI Corps to retake Culp s Hill and personally rode the length of the lines from Cemetery Ridge to Little Round Top to inspect the troops His headquarters were in the Leister House directly behind Cemetery Ridge which exposed it to the 150 gun cannonade which began at 1 pm The house came under direct fire from incorrectly targeted Confederate guns Butterfield was wounded and sixteen horses tied up in front of the house were killed Meade did not want to vacate the headquarters and make it more difficult for messages to find him but the situation became too dire and the house was evacuated 71 During the three days Meade made excellent use of capable subordinates such as Maj Gens John F Reynolds and Winfield S Hancock to whom he delegated great responsibilities 73 He reacted swiftly to fierce assaults on his line s left and right which culminated in Lee s disastrous assault on the center known as Pickett s Charge 74 By the end of three days of fighting the Army of the Potomac s 60 000 troops and 30 000 horses had not been fed in three days and were weary from fighting 75 On the evening of July 4 1863 Meade held a second council of war with his top generals minus Hancock and Gibbon who were absent due to duty and injury The council reviewed the status of the army and debated staying in place at Gettysburg versus chasing the retreating Army of Northern Virginia The council voted to remain in place for one day to allow for rest and recovery and then set out after Lee s army Meade sent a message to Halleck stating I make a reconnaissance to morrow to ascertain what the intention of the enemy is should the enemy retreat I shall pursue him on his flanks 76 Lee s retreat edit On July 4 it was observed that the Confederate Army was forming a new line near the nearby mountains after pulling back their left flank but by July 5 it was clear that they were making a retreat leaving Meade and his men to tend to the wounded and fallen soldiers until July 6 when Meade ordered his men to Maryland 77 Meade was criticized by President Lincoln and others for not aggressively pursuing the Confederates during their retreat 78 Meade s perceived caution stemmed from three causes casualties and exhaustion of the Army of the Potomac which had engaged in forced marches and heavy fighting for a week heavy general officer casualties that impeded effective command and control and a desire to guard a hard won victory against a sudden reversal 79 Halleck informed Meade of the president s dissatisfaction which infuriated Meade that politicians and non field based officers were telling him how to fight the war He wrote back and offered to resign his command but Halleck refused the resignation and clarified that his communication was not meant as a rebuke but an incentive to continue the pursuit of Lee s army 80 At one point the Army of Northern Virginia was trapped with its back to the rain swollen almost impassable Potomac River however the Army of Northern Virginia was able to erect strong defensive positions before Meade whose army had also been weakened by the fighting could organize an effective attack 81 Lee knew he had the superior defensive position and hoped that Meade would attack and the resulting Union Army losses would dampen the victory at Gettysburg By July 14 1863 Lee s troops built a temporary bridge over the river and retreated into Virginia 79 Meade was rewarded for his actions at Gettysburg by a promotion to brigadier general in the regular army on July 7 1863 and the Thanks of Congress 82 which commended Meade and the officers and soldiers of the Army of the Potomac for the skill and heroic valor which at Gettysburg repulsed defeated and drove back broken and dispirited beyond the Rappahannock the veteran army of the rebellion 83 Meade wrote the following to his wife after meeting President Lincoln Yesterday I received an order to repair to Washington to see the President The President was as he always is very considerate and kind He found no fault with my operations although it was very evident he was disappointed that I had not got a battle out of Lee He coincided with me that there was not much to be gained by any farther advance but General Halleck was very urgent that something should be done but what that something was he did not define As the Secretary of War was absent in Tennessee final action was postponed till his return 84 Bristoe and Mine Run campaign edit nbsp Generals George G Meade Andrew A Humphreys and staff in Culpeper Virginia outside Meade s headquarters 1863During the fall of 1863 the Army of the Potomac was weakened by the transfer of the XI and XII Corps to the Western Theater 85 Meade felt pressure from Halleck and the Lincoln administration to pursue Lee into Virginia but he was cautious due to a misperception that Lee s Army was 70 000 in size when the reality was they were only 55 000 compared to the Army of the Potomac at 76 000 Many of the Union troop replacements for the losses suffered at Gettysburg were new recruits and it was uncertain how they would perform in combat 86 Lee petitioned Jefferson Davis to allow him to take the offensive against the cautious Meade which would also prevent further Union troops being sent to the Western Theater to support William Rosencrans at the Battle of Chickamauga 87 nbsp Commanders of the Army of the Potomac Gouverneur K Warren William H French George G Meade Henry J Hunt Andrew A Humphreys and George Sykes in September 1863The Army of the Potomac was stationed along the north bank of the Rapidan River and Meade made his headquarters in Culpeper Virginia 88 In the Bristoe Campaign Lee attempted to flank the Army of the Potomac and force Meade to move north of the Rappahannock River 89 The Union forces had deciphered the Confederate semaphore code This along with spies and scouts gave Meade advance notice of Lee s movements 90 As Lee s troops moved north to the west of the Army of the Potomac Meade abandoned his headquarters at Culpeper and gave orders for his troops to move north to intercept Lee 91 Meade successfully outmaneuvered Lee in the campaign and gained a small victory Lee reported that his plans failed due to the quickness of Meade s redeployment of resources 92 However Meade s inability to stop Lee from approaching the outskirts of Washington prompted Lincoln to look for another commander of the Army of the Potomac 93 In late November 1863 Meade planned one last offensive against Lee before winter weather limited troop movement In the Mine Run Campaign Meade attempted to attack the right flank of the Army of Northern Virginia south of the Rapidan River but the maneuver failed due to the poor performance of William H French 94 There was heavy skirmishing but a full attack never occurred Meade determined that the Confederate forces were too strong 95 and was convinced by Warren that an attack would have been suicidal 96 Meade held a council of war which concluded to withdraw across the Rapidan River during the night of December 1 1863 97 Overland campaign edit 1864 was an election year and Lincoln understood that the fate of his reelection lay in the Union Army success against the Confederates Lt Gen Ulysses S Grant fresh off his success in the Western Theater was appointed commander of all Union armies in March 1864 98 In his meeting with Lincoln Grant was told he could select who he wanted to lead the Army of the Potomac Edwin M Stanton the Secretary of War told Grant You will find a very weak irresolute man there and my advice to you is to replace him at once 99 Meade offered to resign 100 and stated the task at hand was of such importance that he would not stand in the way of Grant choosing the right man for the job and offered to serve wherever placed Grant assured Meade he had no intentions of replacing him 101 Grant later wrote that this incident gave him a more favorable opinion of Meade than the great victory at Gettysburg Grant knew that Meade disapproved of Lincoln s strategy and was unpopular with politicians and the press Grant was not willing to allow him free command of the Army of the Potomac without direct supervision 102 Grant s orders to Meade before the Overland Campaign were direct and the point He stated Lee s army will be your objective point Wherever Lee goes there you will go also 103 On May 4 1864 the Army of the Potomac left its winter encampment and crossed the Rapidan River Meade and Grant both believed that Lee would retreat to the North Anna River or to Mine Run Lee had received intelligence about the movements of the Army of the Potomac and countered with a move to the East and met the Union Army at the Wilderness 104 Meade ordered Warren to attack with his whole Corps and had Hancock reinforce with his II Corps 105 Meade ordered additional Union troops to join the battle but they struggled to maintain formation and communicate with each other in the thick woods of the Wilderness 106 After three days of brutal fighting and the loss of 17 000 men the Union Army called it a draw and Meade and Grant moved with their forces south toward Spotsylvania Court House to place the Union Army between Lee s forces and Richmond in the hopes of drawing them out to open field combat 107 nbsp Horse artillery headquarters in Brandy Station Virginia February 1864 The Union Army moved ponderously slowly toward their new positions and Meade lashed out at Maj Gen Philip Sheridan and his cavalry corps blaming them for not clearing the road and not informing Meade of the enemy s movements 108 Grant had brought Sheridan with him from the Western Theater and he found the Army of the Potomac s cavalry corps run down and in poor discipline Meade and Sheridan clashed over the use of cavalry since the Army of the Potomac had historically used cavalry as couriers scouting and headquarters guards 109 Sheridan told Meade that he could whip Stuart if Meade let him Meade reported the conversation to Grant thinking he would reprimand the insubordinate Sheridan 108 but he replied Well he generally knows what he is talking about Let him start right out and do it 110 Meade deferred to Grant s judgment and issued orders to Sheridan to proceed against the enemy s cavalry and from May 9 through May 24 sent him on a raid toward Richmond directly challenging the Confederate cavalry 111 Sheridan s cavalry had great success they broke up the Confederate supply lines liberated hundreds of Union prisoners mortally wounded Confederate General J E B Stuart and threatened the city of Richmond 112 However his departure left the Union Army blind to enemy movements 113 Grant made his headquarters with Meade for the remainder of the war which caused Meade to chafe at the close supervision he received A newspaper reported the Army of the Potomac was directed by Grant commanded by Meade and led by Hancock Sedgwick and Warren 114 Following an incident in June 1864 in which Meade disciplined reporter Edward Cropsey from The Philadelphia Inquirer newspaper for an unfavorable article all of the press assigned to his army agreed to mention Meade only in conjunction with setbacks Meade apparently knew nothing of this arrangement and the reporters giving all of the credit to Grant angered Meade 115 Additional differences caused further friction between Grant and Meade Waging a war of attrition in the Overland Campaign against Lee Grant was willing to suffer previously unacceptable losses with the knowledge that the Union Army had replacement soldiers available whereas the Confederates did not 116 Meade was opposed to Grant s recommendations to directly attack fortified Confederate positions which resulted in huge losses of Union soldiers 117 Grant became frustrated with Meade s cautious approach and despite his initial promise to allow Meade latitude in his command Grant began to override Meade and order the tactical deployment of the Army of the Potomac 118 Meade became frustrated with his lack of autonomy and his performance as a military leader suffered 119 During the Battle of Cold Harbor Meade inadequately coordinated the disastrous frontal assault 120 However Meade took some satisfaction that Grant s overconfidence at the start of the campaign against Lee had been reduced after the brutal confrontation of the Overland Campaign and stated I think Grant has had his eyes opened and is willing to admit now that Virginia and Lee s army is not Tennessee and Braxton Bragg s army 121 After the Battle of Spotsylvania Court House Grant requested that Meade be promoted to major general of the regular army In a telegram to Secretary of War Edwin Stanton on May 13 1864 Grant stated that Meade has more than met my most sanguine expectations He and William T Sherman are the fittest officers for large commands I have come in contact with 122 123 Meade felt slighted that his promotion was processed after that of Sherman and Sheridan the latter his subordinate 124 125 The U S Senate confirmed Sherman and Sheridan on January 13 1865 Meade on February 1 Subsequently Sheridan was promoted to lieutenant general over Meade on March 4 1869 after Grant became president and Sherman became the commanding general of the U S Army However his date of rank meant that he was outranked at the end of the war only by Grant Halleck and Sherman 126 Richmond Petersburg campaign edit Meade and the Army of the Potomac crossed the James River to attack the strategic supply route centered on Petersburg Virginia They probed the defenses of the city and Meade wrote We find the enemy as usual in a very strong position defended by earthworks and it looks very much as if we will have to go through a siege of Petersburg before entering on a siege of Richmond 127 An opportunity opened up to lead the Army of the Shenandoah to protect Washington D C against the raids of Jubal Early Meade wanted the role to free himself from under Grant however the position was given to Sheridan When Meade asked Grant why it did not go to himself the more experienced officer Grant stated that Lincoln did not want to take Meade away from the Army of the Potomac and imply that his leadership was substandard 128 During the Siege of Petersburg he approved the plan of Maj Gen Ambrose Burnside to plant explosives in a mine shaft dug underneath the Confederate line east of Petersburg but at the last minute he changed Burnside s plan to lead the attack with a well trained African American division that was highly drilled just for this action instructing him to take a politically less risky course and substitute an untrained and poorly led white division The resulting Battle of the Crater was one of the great fiascoes of the war 129 nbsp General Meade and other generals of Army of the Potomac in Washington D C June 1865Although he fought during the Appomattox Campaign Grant and Sheridan received most of the credit and Meade was not present when Lee surrendered at Appomattox Court House 115 With the war over the Army of the Potomac was disbanded on June 28 1865 and Meade s command of it ended 130 Political rivalries edit Many of the political rivalries in the Army of the Potomac stemmed from opposition to the politically conservative full time officers from West Point Meade was a Douglas Democrat and saw the preservation of the Union as the war s true goal and only opposed slavery as it threatened to tear the Union apart He was a supporter of McClellan the previously removed commander of the Army of the Potomac and was politically aligned with him 131 Other McClellan loyalists who advocated a more moderate prosecution of the war such as Charles P Stone and Fitz John Porter were arrested and court martialed 96 When Meade was awakened in the middle of the night and informed that he was given command of the Army of the Potomac he later wrote to his wife that he assumed that Army politics had caught up with him and he was being arrested 132 Meade s short temper earned him notoriety and while he was respected by most of his peers and trusted by the men in his army he did not inspire them 133 134 While Meade could be sociable intellectual and courteous in normal times the stress of war made him prickly and abrasive and earned him the nickname Old Snapping Turtle 135 He was prone to bouts of anger and rashness and was paranoid about political enemies coming after him 136 His political enemies included Daniel Butterfield Abner Doubleday Joseph Hooker Alfred Pleasonton and Daniel Sickles 137 Sickles had developed a personal vendetta against Meade because of Sickles s allegiance to Hooker whom Meade had replaced and because of controversial disagreements at Gettysburg Sickles had either mistakenly or deliberately disregarded Meade s orders about placing his III Corps in the defensive line 138 which led to that corps destruction and placed the entire army at risk on the second day of battle 139 Halleck Meade s direct supervisor prior to Grant was openly critical of Meade Both Halleck and Lincoln pressured Meade to destroy Lee s army but gave no specifics as to how it should be done 119 Radical Republicans some of whom like Thaddeus Stevens were former Know Nothings and hostile to Irish Catholics like Meade s family in the Joint Committee on the Conduct of the War suspected that Meade was a Copperhead and tried in vain to relieve him from command 115 Sickles testified to the committee that Meade wanted to retreat his position at Gettysburg before the fighting started 140 The joint committee did not remove Meade from command of the Army of the Potomac 76 Reconstruction editIn July 1865 Meade assumed command of the Military Division of the Atlantic headquartered in Philadelphia On January 6 1868 he took command of the Third Military District in Atlanta In January 1868 he assumed command of the Department of the South The formation of the state governments of Alabama Florida Georgia North Carolina and South Carolina for reentry into the United States was completed under his direct supervision When the Governor of Georgia refused to accept the Reconstruction Acts of Congress Meade replaced him with General Thomas H Ruger 141 After the Camilla massacre in September 1868 caused by anger from white southerners over blacks gaining the right to vote in the 1868 Georgia state constitution Meade investigated the event and decided to leave the punishment in the hands of civil authorities Meade returned to command of the Military Division of the Atlantic in Philadelphia 142 In 1869 following Grant s inauguration as president and William Tecumseh Sherman s assignment to general in chief Sheridan was promoted over Meade to lieutenant general 143 Meade effectively served in semi retirement as the commander of the Military Division of the Atlantic from his home in Philadelphia 144 Personal life editOn December 31 1840 his birthday he married Margaretta Sergeant 145 daughter of John Sergeant running mate of Henry Clay in the 1832 presidential election 10 They had seven children together John Sergeant Meade George Meade Margaret Butler Meade Spencer Meade Sarah Wise Meade Henrietta Meade and William Meade 146 His notable descendants include George Meade Easby great grandson 147 Happy Rockefeller great great granddaughter 148 Matthew Fox great great great grandson 149 Later life and death edit nbsp Meade s tombstone in Laurel Hill CemeteryMeade was presented with a gold medal from the Union League of Philadelphia in recognition for his success at Gettysburg 150 Meade was a commissioner of Fairmount Park in Philadelphia from 1866 until his death The city of Philadelphia gave Meade s wife a house at 1836 Delancey Place in which he lived also The building still has the name Meade over the door but is now used as apartments 151 Meade received an honorary doctorate in law LL D from Harvard University 152 and his scientific achievements were recognized by various institutions including the American Philosophical Society and the Philadelphia Academy of Natural Sciences 34 115 153 Having long suffered from complications caused by his war wounds Meade died on November 6 1872 in the house at 1836 Delancey Place from pneumonia 151 He was buried at Laurel Hill Cemetery 154 155 Legacy edit nbsp Meade s likeness was used on the one thousand dollar Treasury note in 1890Meade has been memorialized with several statues including an equestrian statue at Gettysburg National Military Park by Henry Kirke Bush Brown 156 the George Gordon Meade Memorial statue by Charles Grafly 157 in front of the E Barrett Prettyman United States Courthouse in Washington D C 158 an equestrian statue by Alexander Milne Calder and one by Daniel Chester French atop the Smith Memorial Arch both in Fairmount Park in Philadelphia 159 A bronze bust of Meade by Boris Blai was placed at Barnegat Lighthouse in 1957 160 The United States Army s Fort George G Meade in Fort Meade Maryland is named for him as are Meade County Kansas Fort Meade Florida Fort Meade National Cemetery and Meade County South Dakota 161 The Grand Army of the Republic Meade Post 1 founded in Philadelphia in 1866 was named in his honor 162 The General Meade Society was created to promote and preserve the memory of Union Major General George Meade 163 Members gather in Laurel Hill Cemetery on December 31 to recognize his birthday 151 The Old Baldy Civil War Round Table in Philadelphia is named in honor of Meade s horse during the war 164 In World War II the United States liberty ship SS George G Meade was named in his honor One thousand dollar Treasury Note also called Coin notes of the Series 1890 and 1891 feature portraits of Meade on the obverse The 1890 Series note is called the Grand Watermelon Note by collectors because the large zeroes on the reverse resemble the pattern on a watermelon 165 The preserved head of Old Baldy Meade s wartime horse was donated to the Civil War Museum of Philadelphia by the Grand Army of the Republic Museum in 1979 166 Memorials to Meade edit nbsp George Gordon Meade Memorial by Charles Grafly in front of the E Barrett Prettyman Federal Courthouse in Washington D C nbsp In honor of his war service the city of Philadelphia gifted a house at 1836 Delancey Place to Meade s wife 167 nbsp Equestrian statue of Meade by Henry Kirke Bush Brown on the Gettysburg Battlefield nbsp Equestrian statue of Meade by Alexander Milne Calder in Fairmount Park Philadelphia Pennsylvania nbsp Statue of Meade atop the Smith Memorial Arch in Fairmount Park Philadelphia PennsylvaniaIn popular culture editMeade has been portrayed in several films and television shows Alfred Allen portrayed Meade in the 1924 film The Dramatic Life of Abraham Lincoln Thurston Hall portrayed Meade in the 1940 film Virginia City Rory Calhoun portrayed Meade in the 1982 TV miniseries The Blue and the Gray Richard Anderson portrayed Meade in the 1993 film Gettysburg an adaptation of Michael Shaara s novel The Killer Angels Tom Hanks portrayed Meade in the 2021 TV series 1883 168 Meade is a character in the 2003 alternate history novel Gettysburg A Novel of the Civil War written by Newt Gingrich and William ForstchenDates of rank editInsignia Rank Date ComponentNo insignia Cadet USMA September 1 1831 Regular Army nbsp Second Lieutenant July 1 1835 brevet December 31 1835 permanent Regular Army nbsp First Lieutenant September 23 1846 brevet August 4 1851 permanent Regular Army nbsp Captain May 19 1856 Regular Army nbsp Brigadier General August 31 1861 Volunteers nbsp Major June 18 1862 Regular Army nbsp Major General November 29 1862 Volunteers nbsp Brigadier General July 3 1863 Regular Army nbsp Major General August 18 1864 Regular Army 169 170 See also edit nbsp American Civil War portal nbsp Biography portalList of American Civil War generals Union References editCitations Warner 1964 p 315 a b Huntington 2013 p 11 Baltzell Edward Digby 1958 Philadelphia Gentlemen The Making of a National Upper Class Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press p 142 ISBN 978 0 88738 789 0 Retrieved February 6 2023 a b Huntington 2013 p 12 Cleaves 1960 p 9 Sauers 2003 p 4 Cleaves 1960 pp 9 10 Pennypacker 1901 p 13 Pennypacker 1901 p 12 a b Huntington 2013 p 13 a b Hyde 2003 p 15 Cleaves 1960 p 12 a b Sauers 2003 p 5 Cleaves 1960 pp 13 14 Cleaves 1960 p 15 Cleaves 1960 pp 15 16 Cleaves 1960 pp 16 17 Cleaves 1960 p 18 Huntington 2013 pp 13 14 Sauers 2003 p 6 Cleaves 1960 p 19 Cleaves 1960 pp 38 39 Cleaves 1960 pp 26 27 Cleaves 1960 pp 27 28 a b c d Warner 1964 p 316 Sauers 2003 p 9 Cleaves 1960 p 45 Cleaves 1960 p 46 Cleaves 1960 p 47 Cleaves 1960 p 48 Dean Love Reef Lights Seaswept Lighthouses of the Florida Keys The Historic Key West Preservation Board 1982 ISBN 0 943528 03 8 McCarthy Kevin M Florida Lighthouses University of Florida Press 1990 ISBN 0 8130 0993 6 a b Sauers 2003 p 11 Cleaves 1960 p 49 a b Eicher amp Eicher 2001 p 385 Woodford 1991 p 37 Woodford 1991 p 40 Woodford 1991 p 41 Pennypacker 1901 p 22 Hyde 2003 p 16 Cleaves 1960 p 55 Cleaves 1960 p 61 Cleaves 1960 pp 62 63 Pennypacker 1901 pp 32 33 Pennypacker 1901 p 49 Cleaves 1960 p 68 Cleaves 1960 p 69 Brown 2021 p 7 Pennypacker 1901 p 70 Pennypacker 1901 p 83 Pennypacker 1901 pp 71 74 Tagg 1998 p 2 Brown 2021 pp 7 8 Pennypacker 1901 pp 85 87 Pennypacker 1901 p 91 a b c Brown 2021 p 8 Huntington 2013 p 106 Pennypacker 1901 p 108 Brown 2021 p 6 Brown 2021 p 14 Gallagher 1999 p 136 Brown 2021 p 4 Brown 2021 p 25 Schroeder Patrick Joseph Hooker 1814 1879 www encyclopediavirginia com Virginia Humanities Retrieved February 14 2023 Pennypacker 1901 p 130 Hyde 2003 p 18 Tagg 1998 pp 2 3 Coddington 1997 p 210 Pennypacker 1901 p 1 Chick 2015 p 10 a b Hall 2003 p 75 a b c Tagg 1998 Hall 2003 p 167 Gallagher 1999 p 144 Tagg 1998 pp 4 6 Brown 2021 p 5 a b General George Meade s Forgotten Council of War www nps gov National Park Service United States Department of the Interior Retrieved March 21 2023 The War of the Rebellion a compilation of the official records of the Union and Confederate armies Library of Congress Washington D C 20540 USA Retrieved March 6 2023 Hall 2003 p 264 a b Chick 2015 p 11 Hyde 2003 p 25 Hall 2003 p 259 Warner 1964 pp 316 317 The Centennial of the United States Military Academy at West Point New York Washington Government Printing Office 1904 p 503 Retrieved March 11 2023 Meade George 1913 The Life and Letters of George Gordon Meade Major General United States Army New York Charles Scribner s Sons p 154 Retrieved February 8 2023 Pennypacker 1901 pp 223 224 Backus amp Orrison 2015 pp 2 3 Backus amp Orrison 2015 pp 3 4 Backus amp Orrison 2015 p 4 Backus amp Orrison 2015 p 11 Backus amp Orrison 2015 p 13 Backus amp Orrison 2015 p 16 Pennypacker 1901 p 234 Backus amp Orrison 2015 p xx Chick 2015 pp 15 16 Mine Run Payne s Farm www battlefields org American Battlefield Trust Retrieved March 13 2023 a b Chick 2015 p 16 Salmon 2001 p 226 Dunkerly Pfanz amp Ruth 2014 pp xxi xxii Chick 2015 p 17 Rafuse Ethan S George Gordon Meade 1815 1872 www encyclopediavirginia com Virginia Humanities Retrieved February 14 2023 Rhea 2000 p 10 Chick 2015 p 20 Dunkerly Pfanz amp Ruth 2014 p 2 Hogan 2014 p 17 Hogan 2014 p 18 Hogan 2014 p 19 Hogan 2014 pp 26 27 a b Hogan 2014 p 30 Rhea 2000 p 36 Rhea 2000 p 37 Coffey David 2005 Sheridan s Lieutenants Phil Sheridan His Generals and the Final Year of the Civil War Lanham Maryland Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers Inc p 22 ISBN 0 7425 4306 4 Retrieved March 14 2023 Rhea 2000 p 35 Hogan 2014 p 47 Dunkerly Pfanz amp Ruth 2014 p 7 a b c d Heidler amp Heidler 2002 p 1296 Rhea 2000 p 19 Hess Earl J 2007 Trench Warfare Under Grant amp Lee Field Fortifications in the Overland Campaign Chapel Hill The University of North Carolina Press p 164 ISBN 978 0 8078 3154 0 Retrieved March 15 2023 Rhea 2000 p 14 a b Chick 2015 p 15 Hogan 2014 pp 63 65 Trudeau 1991 p 33 Huntington 2013 p 277 Grant chapter LII vol II p 235 He further stated that I would not like to see one of these promotions at this time without seeing both Eicher amp Eicher 2001 p 703 Warner p 644 Sherman was appointed on August 12 1864 and confirmed on December 12 with date of rank August 12 Sheridan was appointed November 14 with date of rank November 8 Meade was not appointed until November 26 although his date of rank was established as August 18 meaning he technically outranked Sheridan but was embarrassed that his name was not put forward first Eicher amp Eicher 2001 pp 701 702 Trudeau 1991 p 48 Trudeau 1991 p 141 Wolfe Brendan Crater Battle of the www encyclopediavirginia com Virginia Humanities Retrieved March 23 2023 Huntington 2013 p 350 Chick 2015 pp 13 14 Coddington 1997 p 209 Tagg 1998 pp 1 4 Heidler amp Heidler 2002 p 1295 General George Meade Equestrian Statue www nps gov National Park Service United States Department of the Interior Retrieved March 23 2023 Chick 2015 pp 16 17 Chick 2015 pp 12 13 Hall 2003 p 98 Sears Stephen W 1999 Controversies amp Commanders Dispatches from the Army of the Potomac Boston Houghton Mifflin Company pp 215 222 ISBN 978 0 618 05706 1 Retrieved February 8 2023 Coddington 1997 p 339 Pennypacker 1901 p 389 Pennypacker 1901 p 390 Warner 1964 p 644 Cole Arthur C Meade George Meade George Gordon March 1915 The Life and Letters of George Gordon Meade Major General United States Army The Mississippi Valley Historical Review 1 4 296 301 doi 10 2307 1886971 ISSN 0161 391X JSTOR 1886971 Cleaves 1960 p 17 The Pennsylvania magazine of history and biography Philadelphia The Historical Society of Pennsylvania 1900 p 243 Retrieved February 28 2023 Visitors didn t stand a ghost of a chance George G Meade Easby a one of a kind Hiller Archived August 12 2010 at the Wayback Machine Chestnut Hill Local December 15 2005 Weaber Gerald November 2009 Fascinating Fitlers among the movers and shakers since Riverton s early days PDF Gaslight News Historical Society of Riverton XXXIX 4 5 Retrieved October 9 2018 Sharp Nathan July 14 2020 10 Things You Didn t Know About the Cast of Lost www thethings com Retrieved February 8 2023 Hyde 2003 p 17 a b c Kyriakodis Harry August 7 2015 Forgotten And Alone Bring Old Baldy And the General Into Town www hiddencityphila org Hidden City Philadelphia Retrieved March 7 2023 Pennypacker 1901 p 391 APS Member History search amphilsoc org Retrieved April 27 2021 Eicher amp Eicher 2001 p 384 The Soldier s Rest Obsequies of Gen Meade in Philadelphia PDF The New York Times November 11 1872 Henry Kirke Brown The Father of American Sculpture www library udel edu University of Delaware Retrieved February 9 2023 Scott Gary September 19 1977 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form Civil War Monuments in Washington D C National Park Service Retrieved February 20 2015 Major General George Gordon Meade Monument www historicsites dcpreservation org DC Preservation League Retrieved February 9 2023 Smith Memorial Arch 1897 1912 www associationforpublicart org Association for Public Art Retrieved February 9 2023 Huntington 2013 p 32 Federal Writers Project 1940 South Dakota place names v 1 3 University of South Dakota p 38 Archived from the original on June 6 2016 Waskie Andy July 7 2021 Story of the G A R Post 2 Army Mule www generalmeadesociety org The General Meade Society of Philadelphia Inc Retrieved February 9 2023 General Meade Society Mission Statement www generalmeadesociety org The General Meade Society of Philadelphia Inc March 11 2015 Retrieved February 9 2023 Old Baldy Civil War Round Table of Philadelphia www oldbaldycwrt org South Bay CWRT Retrieved February 9 2023 Grand Watermelon Note www atlantafed org Retrieved February 9 2023 Rosenheck Mabel Civil War Museum of Philadelphia www philadelphiaencyclopedia org The Encyclopedia of Greater Philadelphia Retrieved February 9 2023 Nickels Thom 2014 Legendary Local of Center City Philadelphia Pennsylvania Charleston South Carolina Arcadia Publishing p 17 ISBN 978 1 4671 0141 7 Retrieved March 7 2023 Melas Chloe December 27 2021 Tom Hanks makes cameo in 1883 CNN Retrieved March 9 2022 Cullum George W 1891 Biographical register of the officers and graduates of the U S Military Academy at West Point N Y from its establishment in 1802 to 1890 Vol I 3rd ed Boston Houghton Mifflin pp 601 609 Official Army Register for January 1871 Washington Adjutant General s Office 1871 p 3 Sources Backus Bill Orrison Robert 2015 A Want of Vigilance The Bristoe Station Campaign October 9 19 1863 Savas Beatie ISBN 978 1 61121 300 3 Brown Kent Masterson 2021 Meade at Gettysburg A Study in Command The University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 1 4696 6200 8 Chick Sean Michael 2015 The Battle of Petersburg June 15 18 1864 Potomac Books ISBN 978 1 61234 737 0 Cleaves Freeman 1960 Meade of Gettysburg University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 0 8061 2298 6 Coddington Edwin B 1997 The Gettysburg Campaign A Study in Command Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 684 84569 2 Davis William C 1986 Death in the Trenches Grant at Petersburg Volume 22 of Civil War Time Life Books ISBN 978 0 809 44777 0 Dunkerly Robert M Pfanz Donald C Ruth David R 2014 No Turning Back A Guide to the 1864 Overland Campaign From the Wilderness to Cold Harbor May 4 June 13 1864 Savas Beatie ISBN 978 1 61121 193 1 Eicher John H Eicher David J 2001 Civil War High Commands Stanford University Press ISBN 0 8047 3641 3 Gallagher Gary W 1999 Three Days at Gettysburg Essays on Confederate and Union Leadership Kent State University Press ISBN 0 87338 629 9 Grant Ulysses S 1885 Personal Memoirs of U S Grant Charles L Webster amp Company Hall Jeffrey C 2003 The Stand of the U S Army at Gettysburg Indiana University Press ISBN 0 253 34258 9 Heidler David Stephen Heidler Jeanne T 2002 Encyclopedia of the American Civil War A Political Social and Military History W W Norton ISBN 978 0 3930 4758 5 Hogan David W Jr 2014 The Overland Campaign 4 May 15 June 1864 Center of Military History United States Army ISBN 978 0 16 092517 7 Huntington Tom 2013 Searching for George Gordon Meade The Forgotten Victor of Gettysburg Stackpole Books ISBN 978 0 8117 0813 5 Hyde Bill 2003 The Union Generals Speak The Meade Hearings on the Battle of Gettysburg Louisiana State University Press ISBN 0 8071 2581 4 Jaynes Gregory 1986 The Killing Ground Wilderness to Cold Harbor Volume 1 of Civil War Time Life Books ISBN 978 0 809 44768 8 Pennypacker Isaac Rusling 1901 General Meade D Appleton and Company ISBN 978 0 7222 9257 0 Rhea Gordon C 2000 To the North Anna River Grant and Lee May 13 25 1864 Louisiana State University Press ISBN 978 0 8071 3111 4 Salmon John S 2001 The Official Virginia Civil War Battlefield Guide Stackpole Books ISBN 0 8117 2868 4 Sauers Richard A 2003 Meade Victor of Gettysburg Potomac Books Inc ISBN 1 57488 418 2 Schmutz John F 2009 The Battle of the Crater A Complete History McFarland amp Company Inc ISBN 978 0 7864 3982 9 Tagg Larry 1998 The Generals of Gettysburg The Leaders of America s Greatest Battle Da Capo Press ISBN 978 0 306 81242 2 Trudeau Noah Andre 1991 The Last Citadel Petersburg June 1864 April 1865 Savas Beatie ISBN 978 1 61121 212 9 Warner Ezra J 1964 Generals in Blue Lives of the Union Commanders Louisiana State University Press ISBN 0 8071 0822 7 Woodford Arthur M 1991 Charting the Inland Seas A History of the U S Lake Survey Wayne State University Press ISBN 0 8143 2499 1 Further reading nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to George Meade nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Meade George Gordon Brown Canter Jr 1991 Moving a military road PDF South Florida History Magazine No 2 pp 8 11 Archived from the original PDF on March 13 2016 Retrieved November 18 2017 via HistoryMiami Hunt Harrison Heroes of the Civil War New York Military Press 1990 ISBN 0 517 01739 3 Sears Stephen W Gettysburg Boston Houghton Mifflin 2003 ISBN 0 395 86761 4 Stowe Christopher S A Philadelphia Gentleman the Cultural Institutional and Political Socialization of George Gordon Meade PhD diss University of Toledo 2005 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to George Meade The George G Meade collection including papers covering all aspects of his career are available for research use at the Historical Society of Pennsylvania General Meade Society of Philadelphia Photographs of Meade at the Wayback Machine archived February 8 2008 Military officesPreceded byJoseph Hooker Commander of the I Corps Army of the Potomac September 17 1862 September 29 1862 Succeeded byJohn F ReynoldsPreceded byDaniel Butterfield Commander of the Fifth Army CorpsDecember 25 1862 January 26 1863 Succeeded byCharles GriffinPreceded byGeorge Sykes Commander of the Fifth Army CorpsFebruary 5 1863 February 16 1863 Succeeded byAndrew A HumphreysPreceded byAndrew A Humphreys Commander of the Fifth Army CorpsFebruary 28 1863 June 28 1863 Succeeded byGeorge SykesPreceded byJoseph Hooker Commander of the Army of the PotomacJune 28 1863 June 28 1865 Succeeded by none end of Civil War Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title George Meade amp oldid 1202396938, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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