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Henry Heth

Henry Heth (/ˈhθ/ not /ˈhɛθ/) (December 16, 1825 – September 27, 1899) was a career United States Army officer who became a Confederate general in the American Civil War.


Henry Heth
General Heth
Nickname(s)"Harry", "Jack" (in youth & at West Point)
Born(1825-12-16)December 16, 1825
Black Heath, Virginia
DiedSeptember 27, 1899(1899-09-27) (aged 73)
Washington, D.C.
Resting place
Allegiance United States
Confederate States
Service/branch United States Army
 Confederate States Army
Years of service1847–61 (USA)
1861–65 (CSA)
Rank Captain (USA)
Major-General (CSA)
Battles/warsCivil War Indian Wars
RelationsGeorge Pickett (cousin)

He came to the notice of Robert E. Lee while serving briefly as his quartermaster, and was given a brigade in the Third Corps of the Army of Northern Virginia commanded by A. P. Hill, whose division he commanded when the latter was wounded at Chancellorsville. He is generally blamed for accidentally starting the Battle of Gettysburg by sending half his division into the town before the rest of the army was fully prepared. Later in the day, Confederate troops succeeded in routing two Union corps, but at a heavy cost in casualties, including Heth himself. Heth continued to command his division during the remainder of the war and briefly took command of the Third Corps in April 1865 after the death of General Hill. Heth surrendered with the rest of Lee's army on April 9.

Early life

Henry Heth was born at Black Heath in Chesterfield County, Virginia, son of United States Navy Captain John Heth, and Margaret L. Pickett, sister of Robert Pickett, who was the father of Confederate general, George Pickett. He usually went by "Harry", the name also preferred by his grandfather, American Revolutionary War Colonel Henry Heth, who had established the Heth family in the coal business in the Virginia Colony after serving in the American Revolution. (The name Heth is pronounced like "Heath".) Henry Heth was born and raised in Virginia, as were both of his parents, all four of his grandparents and all eight of his great-grandparents. All sixteen of his great-great-grandparents came to Virginia from England, specifically from the rural areas of Hertfordshire, Hampshire, Buckinghamshire, Berkshire and Surrey.[1]

Heth was wounded at West Point in 1846 with a bayonet stab to his leg. He graduated from the United States Military Academy at the bottom of his class in 1847 (like his cousin George the year before). He was commissioned a brevet second lieutenant and assigned to the 1st Infantry Regiment. His antebellum career was served primarily in western posts, some as a quartermaster. He was serving as a first lieutenant in the 6th Infantry when John C. Symmes III refused a captaincy in the new 10th Infantry on March 3, 1855, and Heth was appointed in his place. He played a prominent role in the 1855 Battle of Ash Hollow (also known as the Harney Massacre due to the large number of Lakota women and children killed), leading a company of mounted infantry against the Lakota. In 1858, he created the first marksmanship manual for the Army.

Heth served at Camp Floyd during the Utah War. Camp Floyd had the largest concentration of US Troops at any post prior to the Civil War. While stationed in the desolate Utah Territory, he and others petitioned[2] the Freemason's Grand Lodge of Missouri to establish a Masonic Lodge in the Utah Territory. It was granted on March 6, 1859, for Rocky Mountain #205 under dispensation from Missouri; Heth served as the last Senior Warden of the first Masonic Lodge in Utah,[3] after which the Army was called away from Utah Territory to fight the American Civil War.

Civil War

 
Heth as a member of the Confederate Army

After the war began at Fort Sumter, Heth resigned from the U.S. Army and joined the Confederate States Army, where he was promoted to lieutenant colonel. His initial assignment was to muster and drill regiments of state militia in southwestern Virginia. In June, he was promoted to colonel. Born in Virginia's Tidewater region, Heth was unpopular with the mountain farmers and was known as a strict disciplinarian. In turn, Heth was frustrated by the illiteracy and lack of discipline of his men, as well as General John B. Floyd's actions as commanding officer in the region. Heth wrote of Floyd, "I soon discovered that my chief was as incapacitated for the work he had undertaken as I would have been to lead an Italian opera." Under Floyd, Heth led his regiment in the battles of Kessler's Cross Lanes and Carnifex Ferry. His brief service as General Robert E. Lee's quartermaster in the Virginia Provisional Army led to a close friendship between the two officers, Heth being one of the few generals whom Lee called by his first name. He spent the remainder of 1861 in the Kanawha Valley in western Virginia in the 5th and 45th Virginia Infantry regiments. He was promoted to brigadier general on January 6, 1862.

In the spring of 1862 Heth was in command of the "Army of the New River," (in actuality the 22nd and 45th Virginia Infantry regiments, with attached cavalry and artillery). Heth's diminutive force held off the forces of General Jacob D. Cox at Giles (County) Courthouse (May 10, 1862) and pursued the enemy to Lewisburg, where Heth was forced to withdraw (May 23, 1862). The actions were critical to keeping federal forces tied up and out of the southern Shenandoah Valley while Stonewall Jackson was conducting his own campaign 120 miles to the north. Despite the small size of his force, Heth submitted his reports as an army commander and had his regimental commanders write their own as "brigade" commanders, possibly assisting in the eventual promotion of Heth to major general.[4]

He was then sent west to the Department of East Tennessee, to serve under Edmund Kirby Smith. During the Kentucky Campaign, he was sent by Smith to take a division north from Lexington, Kentucky, to make a demonstration on Cincinnati. Although this caused a great commotion in the city's defenses, only a few skirmishes occurred.[5] Smith's portion of the army was spread too far north in Kentucky to consolidate with Bragg's portion in time for the Battle of Perryville. Bragg ordered the withdrawal of Confederate forces back to Tennessee, and Smith was subsequently transferred to the Trans-Mississippi Department, his forces again missing a vital battle at Stones River.

In March 1863, Lee, commanding the Army of Northern Virginia, then positioned at Fredericksburg, recalled Heth to Virginia to serve as a brigade commander in Maj. Gen. A. P. Hill's division. He fought in the Battle of Chancellorsville, showing aggressive, but misguided, qualities in his first large-scale combat, attacking without reserves against a Union force emerging from the Wilderness. Heth assumed command of Hill's division after Hill assumed corps command after Stonewall Jackson's wounding. Following the death of Jackson, Lee reorganized his army into three corps, promoting Hill to the Third Corps. Heth retained his division command and was promoted to major general on May 24, 1863.

 
An illustration of Confederate troops at Gettysburg on July 1, 1863

Heth's division made history by inadvertently starting the Battle of Gettysburg. Marching east from Cashtown on July 1, 1863, Heth sent two brigades ahead in a reconnaissance in force. His memoirs referred to sending them in a search of shoes in Gettysburg, but some historians[who?] consider this an apocryphal story; they[who?] say Heth knew that Jubal A. Early had been in Gettysburg a few days earlier and any available shoes would have been taken at that time. They[who?] also consider sending two brigades on such a mission would have been wasteful. The brigades made contact with Union cavalry under Brig. Gen. John Buford and spread out into battle formation.

Lee had ordered A. P. Hill to avoid a general engagement with the enemy before he could assemble his full army, but Heth's actions had now rendered that order moot. They were engaged, and Union reinforcements started arriving quickly. Heth's decision to deploy his two brigades before the arrival of the rest of his division was an error as well; they were repulsed in hard fighting against an elite division of the Army of the Potomac's I Corps, including the famously tenacious Iron Brigade. After a lull in fighting, Heth brought two more brigades into the fray in the afternoon and the Union forces were driven back to Seminary Ridge, but principally because the XI Corps' right flank was crushed by Richard S. Ewell's corps coming in from the north. Finally, Heth attacked again in conjunction with the division of Maj. Gen. Robert E. Rodes and the Union corps were routed, retreating back through town to Cemetery Hill, but Confederate losses were severe. Heth should have better coordinated his attack with the division of Maj. Gen. Dorsey Pender. Heth was wounded during the attack when a bullet struck him in the head. However, he was wearing a hat that was too large and stuffed with papers to make it fit. The papers probably deflected the bullet to avoid a fatal wound, but Heth was knocked unconscious and effectively out of the battle. Parts of his division, under the command of Brig. Gen. Johnston Pettigrew, saw more action two days later in Pickett's Charge, and Heth recovered enough to command during the retreat back to Virginia and the minor engagements of the fall of 1863.

Harry Heth commanded his division through the 1864 Overland Campaign. At the Battle of the Wilderness, his men were on the front line of A.P. Hill's corps, which blunted Union attacks on the Orange Plank Road. In the subsequent Battle of Spotsylvania Court House, his division was held primarily in the rear, and was positioned on the Confederate left flank at the Battles of North Anna and Cold Harbor. Heth also participated in the Siege of Petersburg, playing direct roles in the battles of Globe Tavern; Second Ream's Station; Peeble's Farm; Boydton Plank Road; and Hatcher's Run. Following the death of Gen. A.P. Hill on April 2, 1865, Heth briefly took over command of the Third Corps. Heth's troops, now led by Gen. John R. Cooke, were pushed back at the Battle of Sutherland's Station. Heth led the remainder of his troops in the Appomattox Campaign, fighting at Cumberland Church and retreating to Appomattox Court House, where he surrendered with Lee on April 9, 1865.

Postbellum years

 
Heth in 1895

After the war, Heth worked in the insurance business and later served the government as a surveyor and in the Office of Indian Affairs. He died in Washington, D.C., and is buried in Hollywood Cemetery in Richmond, Virginia.[6] Heth served as the first Commander of the Centennial Legion of Historic Military Commands when it was founded in 1876.[7]

In popular media

Heth was portrayed by Warren Burton in the 1993 film Gettysburg, based on Michael Shaara's novel, The Killer Angels.

Selected works

  • A System of Target Practice (published in 1858)
  • The Memoirs of Henry Heth (posthumous, 1974).

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Virginia Lives: The Old Dominion Who's who - Page 450 by Richard Lee Morton · 1964
  2. ^ Goodwin, S. H. (1934). "Freemasonry in Utah : Rocky Mountain Lodge No. 205, A.F. & A.M., 1859-1861, Camp Floyd, the First Masonic Lodge in Utah" (PDF). Camp Floyd Historic Lodge No. 205 F. & A. M. Educational bulletin (Freemasons. Utah. Grand Lodge. Committee on Masonic Education and Instruction), no. 1, amplified. Salt Lake City. pp. 16–17. Retrieved 14 July 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  3. ^ Goodwin, S. H. (1934). "Freemasonry in Utah : Rocky Mountain Lodge No. 205, A.F. & A.M., 1859-1861, Camp Floyd, the First Masonic Lodge in Utah" (PDF). Camp Floyd Historic Lodge No. 205 F. & A. M. Educational bulletin (Freemasons. Utah. Grand Lodge. Committee on Masonic Education and Instruction), no. 1, amplified. Salt Lake City. pp. 3, 38. Retrieved 14 July 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  4. ^ "Official Records of the War of the Rebellion, Series 1, vol 12, Part 1, page 491-495 (Second Manassas)".
  5. ^ Noe, pp. 86-87.
  6. ^ "Death of General Heth". No. Volume C, Number 229. Alexandria Gazette. Library of Congress - Chronicling America. September 27, 1899. p. 2. Retrieved September 20, 2018.
  7. ^ Centennial Legion of Historic Military Commands web site. Retrieved October 3, 2012.

References

  • Berg, Andrew. "The Best Offense." Smithsonian Magazine, September 2005.
  • Eicher, John H., and David J. Eicher. Civil War High Commands. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2001. ISBN 0-8047-3641-3.
  • Noe, Kenneth W. Perryville: This Grand Havoc of Battle. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 2001. ISBN 978-0-8047-3641-1.
  • Sifakis, Stewart. Who Was Who in the Civil War. New York: Facts On File, 1988. ISBN 978-0-8160-1055-4.
  • Tagg, Larry. , Campbell, CA: Savas Publishing, 1998. ISBN 1-882810-30-9.
  • Warner, Ezra J. Generals in Gray: Lives of the Confederate Commanders. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1959. ISBN 978-0-8071-0823-9.

Further reading

External links

  • Henry Heth in Encyclopedia Virginia
  • "Henry Heth". Find a Grave. Retrieved 2007-12-15.

henry, heth, this, article, about, confederate, general, coal, magnate, businessman, december, 1825, september, 1899, career, united, states, army, officer, became, confederate, general, american, civil, major, generalgeneral, hethnickname, harry, jack, youth,. This article is about the Confederate general For the coal magnate see Henry Heth businessman Henry Heth ˈ h iː 8 not ˈ h ɛ 8 December 16 1825 September 27 1899 was a career United States Army officer who became a Confederate general in the American Civil War Major GeneralHenry HethGeneral HethNickname s Harry Jack in youth amp at West Point Born 1825 12 16 December 16 1825Black Heath VirginiaDiedSeptember 27 1899 1899 09 27 aged 73 Washington D C Resting placeHollywood Cemetery Richmond VirginiaAllegianceUnited States Confederate StatesService wbr branch United States Army Confederate States ArmyYears of service1847 61 USA 1861 65 CSA RankCaptain USA Major General CSA Battles warsCivil War Battle of Chancellorsville Battle of Gettysburg Siege of PetersburgIndian WarsRelationsGeorge Pickett cousin He came to the notice of Robert E Lee while serving briefly as his quartermaster and was given a brigade in the Third Corps of the Army of Northern Virginia commanded by A P Hill whose division he commanded when the latter was wounded at Chancellorsville He is generally blamed for accidentally starting the Battle of Gettysburg by sending half his division into the town before the rest of the army was fully prepared Later in the day Confederate troops succeeded in routing two Union corps but at a heavy cost in casualties including Heth himself Heth continued to command his division during the remainder of the war and briefly took command of the Third Corps in April 1865 after the death of General Hill Heth surrendered with the rest of Lee s army on April 9 Contents 1 Early life 2 Civil War 3 Postbellum years 4 In popular media 5 Selected works 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksEarly life EditHenry Heth was born at Black Heath in Chesterfield County Virginia son of United States Navy Captain John Heth and Margaret L Pickett sister of Robert Pickett who was the father of Confederate general George Pickett He usually went by Harry the name also preferred by his grandfather American Revolutionary War Colonel Henry Heth who had established the Heth family in the coal business in the Virginia Colony after serving in the American Revolution The name Heth is pronounced like Heath Henry Heth was born and raised in Virginia as were both of his parents all four of his grandparents and all eight of his great grandparents All sixteen of his great great grandparents came to Virginia from England specifically from the rural areas of Hertfordshire Hampshire Buckinghamshire Berkshire and Surrey 1 Heth was wounded at West Point in 1846 with a bayonet stab to his leg He graduated from the United States Military Academy at the bottom of his class in 1847 like his cousin George the year before He was commissioned a brevet second lieutenant and assigned to the 1st Infantry Regiment His antebellum career was served primarily in western posts some as a quartermaster He was serving as a first lieutenant in the 6th Infantry when John C Symmes III refused a captaincy in the new 10th Infantry on March 3 1855 and Heth was appointed in his place He played a prominent role in the 1855 Battle of Ash Hollow also known as the Harney Massacre due to the large number of Lakota women and children killed leading a company of mounted infantry against the Lakota In 1858 he created the first marksmanship manual for the Army Heth served at Camp Floyd during the Utah War Camp Floyd had the largest concentration of US Troops at any post prior to the Civil War While stationed in the desolate Utah Territory he and others petitioned 2 the Freemason s Grand Lodge of Missouri to establish a Masonic Lodge in the Utah Territory It was granted on March 6 1859 for Rocky Mountain 205 under dispensation from Missouri Heth served as the last Senior Warden of the first Masonic Lodge in Utah 3 after which the Army was called away from Utah Territory to fight the American Civil War Civil War Edit Heth as a member of the Confederate ArmyAfter the war began at Fort Sumter Heth resigned from the U S Army and joined the Confederate States Army where he was promoted to lieutenant colonel His initial assignment was to muster and drill regiments of state militia in southwestern Virginia In June he was promoted to colonel Born in Virginia s Tidewater region Heth was unpopular with the mountain farmers and was known as a strict disciplinarian In turn Heth was frustrated by the illiteracy and lack of discipline of his men as well as General John B Floyd s actions as commanding officer in the region Heth wrote of Floyd I soon discovered that my chief was as incapacitated for the work he had undertaken as I would have been to lead an Italian opera Under Floyd Heth led his regiment in the battles of Kessler s Cross Lanes and Carnifex Ferry His brief service as General Robert E Lee s quartermaster in the Virginia Provisional Army led to a close friendship between the two officers Heth being one of the few generals whom Lee called by his first name He spent the remainder of 1861 in the Kanawha Valley in western Virginia in the 5th and 45th Virginia Infantry regiments He was promoted to brigadier general on January 6 1862 In the spring of 1862 Heth was in command of the Army of the New River in actuality the 22nd and 45th Virginia Infantry regiments with attached cavalry and artillery Heth s diminutive force held off the forces of General Jacob D Cox at Giles County Courthouse May 10 1862 and pursued the enemy to Lewisburg where Heth was forced to withdraw May 23 1862 The actions were critical to keeping federal forces tied up and out of the southern Shenandoah Valley while Stonewall Jackson was conducting his own campaign 120 miles to the north Despite the small size of his force Heth submitted his reports as an army commander and had his regimental commanders write their own as brigade commanders possibly assisting in the eventual promotion of Heth to major general 4 He was then sent west to the Department of East Tennessee to serve under Edmund Kirby Smith During the Kentucky Campaign he was sent by Smith to take a division north from Lexington Kentucky to make a demonstration on Cincinnati Although this caused a great commotion in the city s defenses only a few skirmishes occurred 5 Smith s portion of the army was spread too far north in Kentucky to consolidate with Bragg s portion in time for the Battle of Perryville Bragg ordered the withdrawal of Confederate forces back to Tennessee and Smith was subsequently transferred to the Trans Mississippi Department his forces again missing a vital battle at Stones River In March 1863 Lee commanding the Army of Northern Virginia then positioned at Fredericksburg recalled Heth to Virginia to serve as a brigade commander in Maj Gen A P Hill s division He fought in the Battle of Chancellorsville showing aggressive but misguided qualities in his first large scale combat attacking without reserves against a Union force emerging from the Wilderness Heth assumed command of Hill s division after Hill assumed corps command after Stonewall Jackson s wounding Following the death of Jackson Lee reorganized his army into three corps promoting Hill to the Third Corps Heth retained his division command and was promoted to major general on May 24 1863 An illustration of Confederate troops at Gettysburg on July 1 1863Heth s division made history by inadvertently starting the Battle of Gettysburg Marching east from Cashtown on July 1 1863 Heth sent two brigades ahead in a reconnaissance in force His memoirs referred to sending them in a search of shoes in Gettysburg but some historians who consider this an apocryphal story they who say Heth knew that Jubal A Early had been in Gettysburg a few days earlier and any available shoes would have been taken at that time They who also consider sending two brigades on such a mission would have been wasteful The brigades made contact with Union cavalry under Brig Gen John Buford and spread out into battle formation Lee had ordered A P Hill to avoid a general engagement with the enemy before he could assemble his full army but Heth s actions had now rendered that order moot They were engaged and Union reinforcements started arriving quickly Heth s decision to deploy his two brigades before the arrival of the rest of his division was an error as well they were repulsed in hard fighting against an elite division of the Army of the Potomac s I Corps including the famously tenacious Iron Brigade After a lull in fighting Heth brought two more brigades into the fray in the afternoon and the Union forces were driven back to Seminary Ridge but principally because the XI Corps right flank was crushed by Richard S Ewell s corps coming in from the north Finally Heth attacked again in conjunction with the division of Maj Gen Robert E Rodes and the Union corps were routed retreating back through town to Cemetery Hill but Confederate losses were severe Heth should have better coordinated his attack with the division of Maj Gen Dorsey Pender Heth was wounded during the attack when a bullet struck him in the head However he was wearing a hat that was too large and stuffed with papers to make it fit The papers probably deflected the bullet to avoid a fatal wound but Heth was knocked unconscious and effectively out of the battle Parts of his division under the command of Brig Gen Johnston Pettigrew saw more action two days later in Pickett s Charge and Heth recovered enough to command during the retreat back to Virginia and the minor engagements of the fall of 1863 Harry Heth commanded his division through the 1864 Overland Campaign At the Battle of the Wilderness his men were on the front line of A P Hill s corps which blunted Union attacks on the Orange Plank Road In the subsequent Battle of Spotsylvania Court House his division was held primarily in the rear and was positioned on the Confederate left flank at the Battles of North Anna and Cold Harbor Heth also participated in the Siege of Petersburg playing direct roles in the battles of Globe Tavern Second Ream s Station Peeble s Farm Boydton Plank Road and Hatcher s Run Following the death of Gen A P Hill on April 2 1865 Heth briefly took over command of the Third Corps Heth s troops now led by Gen John R Cooke were pushed back at the Battle of Sutherland s Station Heth led the remainder of his troops in the Appomattox Campaign fighting at Cumberland Church and retreating to Appomattox Court House where he surrendered with Lee on April 9 1865 Postbellum years Edit Heth in 1895After the war Heth worked in the insurance business and later served the government as a surveyor and in the Office of Indian Affairs He died in Washington D C and is buried in Hollywood Cemetery in Richmond Virginia 6 Heth served as the first Commander of the Centennial Legion of Historic Military Commands when it was founded in 1876 7 In popular media EditHeth was portrayed by Warren Burton in the 1993 film Gettysburg based on Michael Shaara s novel The Killer Angels Selected works EditA System of Target Practice published in 1858 The Memoirs of Henry Heth posthumous 1974 See also Edit Biography portal American Civil War portalList of American Civil War generals Confederate Notes Edit Virginia Lives The Old Dominion Who s who Page 450 by Richard Lee Morton 1964 Goodwin S H 1934 Freemasonry in Utah Rocky Mountain Lodge No 205 A F amp A M 1859 1861 Camp Floyd the First Masonic Lodge in Utah PDF Camp Floyd Historic Lodge No 205 F amp A M Educational bulletin Freemasons Utah Grand Lodge Committee on Masonic Education and Instruction no 1 amplified Salt Lake City pp 16 17 Retrieved 14 July 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Goodwin S H 1934 Freemasonry in Utah Rocky Mountain Lodge No 205 A F amp A M 1859 1861 Camp Floyd the First Masonic Lodge in Utah PDF Camp Floyd Historic Lodge No 205 F amp A M Educational bulletin Freemasons Utah Grand Lodge Committee on Masonic Education and Instruction no 1 amplified Salt Lake City pp 3 38 Retrieved 14 July 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Official Records of the War of the Rebellion Series 1 vol 12 Part 1 page 491 495 Second Manassas Noe pp 86 87 Death of General Heth No Volume C Number 229 Alexandria Gazette Library of Congress Chronicling America September 27 1899 p 2 Retrieved September 20 2018 Centennial Legion of Historic Military Commands web site Retrieved October 3 2012 References EditBerg Andrew The Best Offense Smithsonian Magazine September 2005 Eicher John H and David J Eicher Civil War High Commands Stanford CA Stanford University Press 2001 ISBN 0 8047 3641 3 Noe Kenneth W Perryville This Grand Havoc of Battle Lexington University Press of Kentucky 2001 ISBN 978 0 8047 3641 1 Sifakis Stewart Who Was Who in the Civil War New York Facts On File 1988 ISBN 978 0 8160 1055 4 Tagg Larry The Generals of Gettysburg Campbell CA Savas Publishing 1998 ISBN 1 882810 30 9 Warner Ezra J Generals in Gray Lives of the Confederate Commanders Baton Rouge Louisiana State University Press 1959 ISBN 978 0 8071 0823 9 Further reading EditPfanz Harry W Gettysburg The First Day Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press 2001 ISBN 0 8078 2624 3 Krick Robert K The Unfulfilled Promise of Robert E Lee s Favorite Officer www historynet com June 6 2018 http www historynet com unfulfilled promise robert e lees favorite officer htm Originally published in the January 2008 issue of America s Civil War External links EditHenry Heth in Encyclopedia Virginia Henry Heth Find a Grave Retrieved 2007 12 15 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Henry Heth amp oldid 1171419638, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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