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John Schofield

John McAllister Schofield (September 29, 1831 – March 4, 1906) was an American soldier who held major commands during the American Civil War.[1] He was appointed U.S. Secretary of War (1868–1869) under President Andrew Johnson and later served as Commanding General of the United States Army (1888–1895).[2]

John Schofield
Commanding General of the U.S. Army
In office
August 14, 1888 – September 29, 1895
PresidentGrover Cleveland
Benjamin Harrison
Grover Cleveland
Preceded byPhilip Sheridan
Succeeded byNelson A. Miles
28th United States Secretary of War
In office
June 1, 1868 – March 13, 1869
PresidentAndrew Johnson
Ulysses S. Grant
Preceded byEdwin Stanton
Succeeded byJohn Aaron Rawlins
Personal details
Born
John McAllister Schofield

(1831-09-29)September 29, 1831
Gerry, New York, U.S.
DiedMarch 4, 1906(1906-03-04) (aged 74)
St. Augustine, Florida, U.S.
Resting placeArlington National Cemetery
Political partyRepublican
EducationUnited States Military Academy (BS)
Signature
Military service
Allegiance United States
 • Union
Branch/serviceUnited States Army
 • Union Army
Years of service1853–1860
1861–1895
Rank Lieutenant General
CommandsSuperintendent of the United States Military Academy (1876–1881)
Army of the Frontier
Department of the Missouri
XXIII Corps
Army of the Ohio
Battles/wars
AwardsMedal of Honor

Early life Edit

John McAllister Schofield was born September 29, 1831, in Gerry, Chautauqua County, New York, the son of the Reverend James Schofield (1801–1888) and his first wife, the former Caroline (McAllister) Schofield (1810–1857). His father, a Baptist minister in Sinclairville became a domestic missionary and moved his family (which then included six children and would include 10 who survived infancy) to Bristol, Illinois. When John was 12, they finally settled in Freeport, Illinois, where Rev. Schofield became the town's first Baptist minister in 1845, and where he was ultimately buried in 1888.[3]

As a young man John Schofield was educated in the public schools, helped his family farm and build their home, and then surveyed land in northern Wisconsin before spending a year teaching school in Oneco, Illinois not far from Freeport. Then U.S. Rep. Thomas J. Turner secured John Schofield an appointment to the United States Military Academy at West Point. He sold land for travel expenses and reported on June 1, 1849.[4] In his final year at the Academy, while a teaching assistant in the mathematics section, cadet Schofield was accused of allowing others in his classroom to make offensive jokes and drawings on the blackboard. He was dismissed from West Point, but after meeting with Illinois' U.S. Senator Stephen A. Douglas, appealed the decision to the Secretary of War, who referred the matter back to a Board of Inquiry at the Academy. A majority of the review board voted to rescind the expulsion, but one of the two officers who voted to sustain it, cavalry and artillery instructor Lt. George H. Thomas, later became a commander of Schofield during the Civil War. Although Schofield's eventual memoirs did not mention Thomas on the review board, his persistent criticism of Thomas's generalship after the war may reflect this incident.[5] Schofield graduated in 1853, ranking seventh in his class, and was commissioned a brevet second lieutenant in the artillery.[6]

Schofield served for two years in the artillery. His first post was at Fort Moultrie, South Carolina, which he later noted involved the same guns that were used to bombard Fort Sumter in 1861. He then served at various places in Florida during the armed truce with the Seminole Nation, but contracted fevers and dysentery and was ultimately evacuated (with the assistance of future Confederate General A. P. Hill) and recovered at Culpeper, Virginia.

Upon regaining his health, First Lieutenant Schofield returned to West Point as assistant professor of natural and experimental philosophy from 1855 to 1860. His career seemed stalled, so he took leave (1860–1861), to work as professor of physics at Washington University in St. Louis.[4] Several of his brothers had settled in St. Louis, following the lead of his eldest brother Rev. James Van Pelt Schofield (1825–1898).

Civil War Edit

When the Civil War broke out, Schofield helped assure Missouri did not join the Confederacy. He became a major in the 1st Missouri Infantry Regiment and served as chief of staff to Maj. Gen. Nathaniel Lyon until Lyon's death during the Battle of Wilson's Creek (Missouri) in August 1861. Schofield acted with "conspicuous gallantry" during the battle, and decades later received the Medal of Honor for that action.[7]

Schofield was promoted to brigadier general of volunteers on November 21, 1861. From 1861 to 1863 he held various commands in the Trans-Mississippi Theater. He commanded the District of St Louis from that date to 10 April 1862, the Military District of Missouri from 5 June to 24 September 1862, and the District of Southwest Missouri to 10 November 1862. He led the Army of the Frontier from 12 October 1862 to 30 May 1863. He was promoted to major general of volunteers on November 29, 1862 at the age of 31, making him one of the youngest major generals in the Civil War.[8]

On 30 September 1862, a Federal brigade suffered a defeat at the First Battle of Newtonia in southwest Missouri. Both James G. Blunt and Schofield rushed to Newtonia, Missouri with reinforcements and sent the Confederate force fleeing south into Arkansas. The department commander Samuel Ryan Curtis created the Army of the Frontier with Schofield in command. Blunt led the 1st Division, James Totten the 2nd Division, and Francis J. Herron the 3rd Division. The army numbered 20,000 men, but probably 14,000 were fit for duty. Schofield's army crossed into northwest Arkansas on 17 October.[9] Blunt's division soon moved west into Indian Territory where it won the Battle of Old Fort Wayne on 22 October.[10] Meanwhile, Schofield with the 2nd and 3rd Divisions occupied Huntsville, Arkansas.[11] Schofield's troops clashed with forces led by Thomas C. Hindman, and the Confederates retreated south on 29 October.[12] On 4 November, with the approval of Curtis, Schofield's two divisions withdrew northeast to Springfield, Missouri while Blunt's division remained in northwest Arkansas.[13]

He was eventually relieved of duty in the West, at his own request, due to altercations with his superior Samuel R. Curtis.

From 17 April to 10 May 1863, Schofield led the 3rd Division in the XIV Corps, Army of the Cumberland. He returned to Missouri as commander of the Department of Missouri from 24 May 1863 to 30 January 1864.[8] His command in Missouri was marred by controversy after a massacre at Lawrence, Kansas, when Schofield refused to allow a posse to pursue the combatants into Missouri. Pro-Union Missourians sent a delegation to Washington DC in October to plead with President Lincoln to dismiss Schofield for sympathizing with pro-Confederate Bushwhacker para-military marauders who were attacking loyal Union citizens. Lincoln backed Schofield's position, attributed the carnage to wartime conditions rather than the commander's inadequacy, and instructed Schofield to respect civil liberties unless assemblies or newspapers were working palpable harm to the military.[14]

In 1864, as commander of the Army of the Ohio, Schofield participated in the Atlanta Campaign under Major General William T. Sherman. Sherman placed him in command of a major operation to break the rail lines in late July 1864. Schofield became embroiled in another controversy with the commander of the US XIV Corps (Volunteer), Major General John Palmer, who resigned rather than serve under Schofield, whom he considered to be of lower rank, but whom Gen. Sherman backed, at Utoy Creek (becoming the only resignation during a major operation in U.S. history, although Palmer was ultimately reassigned to Kentucky and helped maintain federal control over that border state). Schofield with his XXIII Corps and the XIV Corps then spent the month in front of Atlanta and East Point with lackluster results. Sherman resorted to a flanking movement to defeat the Confederates under Hood. Schofield was sent to cut off Hardee's retreat at Jonesboro but failed to move. He became embroiled in a further controversy, when placed under General Stanley commanding the US IV Corps, on August 30, 1864.

 
John Schofield during the Civil War

Sherman, after the fall of Atlanta, took the majority of his forces on a March to the Sea through Georgia. Schofield's Army of the Ohio was detached to join Major General George H. Thomas in Tennessee. When Confederate General John Bell Hood invaded Tennessee and nearly cut off Schofield's command at Spring Hill, Hood's rash assault to regain momentum at the subsequent Battle of Franklin resulted in a significant defeat. On December 15–16, Schofield took part in Thomas's crowning victory at the Battle of Nashville where Hood's Army of Tennessee was decisively defeated, and effectively destroyed as a fighting force for the remainder of the war. However, during the buildup towards the battle Schofield intrigued against Thomas, feeding Grant false information, in order to try to succeed his senior in command.[15] For his services at Franklin he was awarded the rank of brigadier general in the regular army on November 30, 1864, and the brevet rank of major general on March 13, 1865.[6]

Ordered to operate with Sherman in North Carolina, Schofield moved his corps by rail and sea to Fort Fisher, North Carolina, in 17 days, occupied Wilmington on February 22, 1865, fought the action at Kinston on March 10, and on March 23, joined Sherman at Goldsboro.

Reconstruction Edit

After the war, President Andrew Johnson sent Schofield on a special diplomatic mission to France, urging withdrawal of French troops in Mexico. General Schofield also joined the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States, a military society composed of officers of the Union armed forces and their descendants. After retiring from active duty, Schofield served as the Order's commander-in-chief (from 1899 to 1903).

During Reconstruction, President Johnson appointed Schofield to serve as military governor of Virginia and of the First Military District. Thus, he oversaw the elections (in which blacks and whites voted) which resulted in the Virginia Constitutional Convention of 1868. When Radicals took over that convention and proposed to disenfranchise former Confederates Schofield voiced concerns about corruption to Congress as well as his commander, General Ulysses Grant. Schofield's position was of high importance and sensitivity, due to the region's proximity to Washington as well as Confederate President Jefferson Davis's incarceration in Norfolk and awaiting trial under Judge John Curtiss Underwood, who chaired the Constitutional Convention and had close links with Congressional Republicans. After President Johnson forced Edwin M. Stanton, a Radical Republican who had served as Secretary of War since 1862, to resign, Schofield served as Secretary of War from June 1868 to March 1869.

Postbellum career Edit

Schofield was promoted to major general in the Regular Army on March 4, 1869, the same day General Ulysses S. Grant was sworn in as president of the United States. Schofield then served for a year as head of the Department of Missouri, the Army's second largest military department.

Following General George Thomas' death, Schofield succeeded him in commanding the Military Division of the Pacific, the country's largest.

In 1873, Schofield was given a secret task by Secretary of War William Belknap to investigate the strategic potential of a United States presence in the Hawaiian Islands. Schofield's report recommended that the United States establish a naval port at Pearl Harbor.

Starting in 1876 until 1881, Schofield became superintendent of the United States Military Academy. A major focus was reducing hazing and increasing professionalism within the academy. In 1878, Schofield drew the ire of Radical Republicans when President Rutherford B. Hayes asked him to reopen the case of Major General Fitz John Porter, who had been convicted by a court-martial for cowardice and disobedience at the Second Battle of Bull Run. Schofield's review board used new evidence from Confederate generals who had participated in the battle, and then found that Porter had been wrongly convicted and that his actions might have saved the entire Union army from complete defeat caused by the ineptitude of Maj. Gens. John Pope and Irvin McDowell.

On April 5, 1880, an African American cadet at West Point, Johnson Chesnut Whittaker, was found bruised and beaten in his cot. He claimed that he had been attacked by fellow cadets, but the administration claimed he had fabricated his story to win sympathy. Whittaker was court-martialed and expelled for allegedly faking an assault on himself staged by his fellow cadets. A Congressional investigation into the incident resulted in Schofield's removal from his post as superintendent in 1881.

Schofield then served in the Department of the Gulf (1881–82), the Military Division of the Pacific (1882–83), the Military Division of the Missouri (1883–86), and the Military Division of the Atlantic (1886–88). He also went to France to witness military maneuvers there. Gen. Schofield was also the first President of the Army and Navy Club (founded 1885, incorporated 1891).[16]

 
Official U.S. Army Chiefs of Staff portrait, by Stephen W. Shaw, 1874 [17]

Upon the death of General Philip Sheridan in 1888, General Schofield, by virtue of his seniority in rank, became the commanding general of the United States Army. He supported military professionalism, including subordination to the civilian Secretary of War. Schofield also supported adoption of lineal promotions and initiated performance reviews which limited political patronage considerations from the promotion process.[18] Writing from South Dakota, General Schofield seconded a report of General Thomas H. Ruger which urged the federal government to honor treaty obligations with Native Americans.[19]

General Schofield received the Medal of Honor on July 2, 1892 for his actions at the Battle of Wilson's Creek in 1861. During the unrest of the Pullman Strike, Schofield worked with President Cleveland in a discreet advisory role.[20][21][22][23] On February 5, 1895, he was promoted to the rank of lieutenant general. Lieutenant General Schofield retired on September 29, 1895, upon reaching the mandatory retirement age of 64.

However, he remained active in government affairs, supporting Elihu Root, testifying before congressional committees in support of the Army Reorganization Act of 1901 and the Dick Act of 1903 which established the U.S. National Guard.

Personal life Edit

 
Georgia Wells Kilbourne, the second Mrs Schofield

John Schofield married Harriet Whitehorn Bartlett, daughter of W.F.C. Bartlett (Chairman of West Point's Department of Philosophy) and they had two daughters and four sons. Two sons, John (1858–1868) and Henry (1862–1863), died before reaching adulthood. William Bartlett Schofield (1860–1906) survived to adulthood and began a U.S. Army career, rising to Major, as did Richmond McAlister Schofield (1867–1941). After Harriet died in 1888, she was buried with her father and son John in the United States Military Academy Post cemetery.

At age 60, in Keokuk, Iowa in June 1891, Schofield remarried, to 27-year-old Georgia Wells Kilbourne, with whom he had a daughter, Georgiana.[24] Georgia Wells Kilbourne was a native of Keokuk, Iowa. She was the daughter of George Kilbourne, and was named Georgia for her father. She attended school in New York, and afterwards studied abroad. General Schofield and Kilbourne were married in 1891. Her mother, Mrs. Kilbourne, and her younger sister, Miss Emma Kilbourne, spent a part of the year at her Washington home. Emma Kilbourne had a literary predilection, devoting much of her time to reading and study.[25]

 
Emma Kilbourne

During his military career, perhaps because of his reformer image, Schofield was dogged by accusations of favoritism toward family members. His brother George Wheeler Schofield (1833–1882) also became a brevet Brigadier General of U.S. Volunteers during the American Civil War, originally volunteering with the 1st Missouri Volunteer Infantry in November 1861 and promoted to Captain in the 1st Missouri Light Artillery after the Siege of Vicksburg, and rising to command the 2nd Regiment Missouri Volunteer Light artillery and ultimately being commissioned as a Major in the Regular Army after the Civil War and serving in the 10th Cavalry and later the 6th Cavalry on the Western Frontier, and for whom the .45 caliber Smith and Wesson Schofield revolver was named. Another brother Charles Brewster Schofield (1849–1901) graduated from West Point in 1870. C.B. Schofield later served as his Gen. J.M. Schofield's aide during the Indian Wars from 1878 to 1885. After rising to the rank of Captain during the Spanish–American War, he died of a heart attack in Matanzas, Cuba in 1901 and was also buried at Arlington National Cemetery. While Gen. John Schofield was in charge of Military District No. 1 in Virginia, his brother Elisha McAllister Schofield (1835–1870) was the assessor for the City of Richmond, Virginia and was among many killed on April 26, 1870 as a result of the infamous collapse of the balcony at the State Capitol during a session of the Virginia Court of Appeals. His son in law, Brig. Gen. Avery Delano Andrews and his wife Mary Campbell Schofield Andrews are also buried at Arlington National Cemetery.

Death and legacy Edit

Before his death, Schofield became the last surviving member of Andrew Johnson's cabinet. His memoirs, Forty-six Years in the Army, were published in 1897.[26] General Schofield became an honorary companion of the Military Order of Foreign Wars.

General Schofield died at St. Augustine, Florida on March 4, 1906. He is buried in Arlington National Cemetery.[27][6] Schofield Barracks, Hawaii are named in his honor.

Today, Schofield is also remembered for a lengthy quotation that all cadets at the United States Military Academy at West Point, The Citadel, Officer Candidate School at Fort Benning, and the United States Air Force Academy are required to memorize. It is an excerpt from his graduation address to the class of 1879 at West Point:

The discipline which makes the soldiers of a free country reliable in battle is not to be gained by harsh or tyrannical treatment. On the contrary, such treatment is far more likely to destroy than to make an army. It is possible to impart instruction and give commands in such a manner and such a tone of voice as to inspire in the soldier no feeling, but an intense desire to obey, while the opposite manner and tone of voice cannot fail to excite strong resentment and a desire to disobey. The one mode or other of dealing with subordinates springs from a corresponding spirit in the breast of the commander. He who feels the respect which is due to others cannot fail to inspire in them respect for himself. While he who feels, and hence manifests, disrespect towards others, especially his subordinates, cannot fail to inspire hatred against himself.

— John M. Schofield

Medal of Honor citation Edit

 

Rank and organization:

Major, 1st Missouri Infantry. Place and date: At Wilsons Creek, Mo., August 10, 1861. Entered service at: St. Louis, Mo. Born: September 29, 1831, Gerry, N.Y. Date of issue: July 2, 1892.

Citation:

Was conspicuously gallant in leading a regiment in a successful charge versus the enemy.[28][29]

The medal was recommended by Schofield himself when he was interim U.S. Secretary of War (1868–69). Historian Benson Bobrick is critical of this and notes the vagueness of the details in the citation.[7]

General Schofield was posthumously entitled to the Civil War Campaign Medal and the Indian Campaign Medal. Both medals were created in 1907, a year after Schofield died.

Dates of rank Edit

Insignia Rank Date Component
  Brevet Second Lieutenant July 1, 1853 2nd Artillery
  Second Lieutenant August 31, 1853 1st Artillery
  First Lieutenant March 3, 1855 1st Artillery
  Major April 26, 1861 1st Missouri Infantry
  Captain May 14, 1861 1st Artillery
  Major June 26, 1861 1st Missouri Artillery
  Brigadier General November 21, 1861 Volunteers
  Major General November 29, 1862 Volunteers
  Brigadier General March 4, 1863 Volunteers
  Major General May 12, 1863 Volunteers
  Brigadier General November 30, 1864 Regular Army
  Brevet Major General March 13, 1865 Regular Army
  Major General March 4, 1869 Regular Army
  Lieutenant General February 5, 1895 Regular Army

[30]

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ "John Mcallister Schofield | U.S. Civil War | U.S. Army | Medal of Honor Recipient". Congressional Medal of Honor Society. Retrieved 2022-03-16.
  2. ^ Schofield was Secretary of War 6/1/1868 to 3/13/1869. Grant took office on 3/4/1869; While it is technically correct that Schofield held the office under Grant for 10 days, it is misleading and confusing to suggest he served as Secretary of War for both presidents. Schofield had the position as a lame duck during the transition period between presidential administrations.
  3. ^ Military order of the Loyal Legion, In Memoriaam, Companion Lieutenant General John McAllister Schofield, P. 8 available at google books ID Yi5caaaaiaaj
  4. ^ a b In Memoriam pp. 8–9
  5. ^ Einolf, p. 64; Schofield, pp. 13–14.
  6. ^ a b c Eicher, pp. 472–73.
  7. ^ a b Bobrick, p. 288, states "Much later, as secretary of war (1868–69), he would award himself the Congressional Medal of Honor (actual award was in 1892) for undocumented valor at Wilson's Creek."
  8. ^ a b Boatner 1959, p. 726.
  9. ^ Shea 2009, pp. 27–29.
  10. ^ Shea 2009, pp. 37–41.
  11. ^ Shea 2009, p. 47.
  12. ^ Shea 2009, p. 59.
  13. ^ Shea 2009, p. 63.
  14. ^ "The Missouri Troubles; President Lincoln's Reply to the Missouri Delegation Gen. Schofield Sustained". The New York Times. October 24, 1863.
  15. ^ Bobrick, pp. 287–88, 329–31, 336–37.
  16. ^ imdb
  17. ^ Bell, William Gardner (2005). Commanding Generals and Chiefs of Staff 1775–2005. Washington, D.C.: Center of Military History, United States Army. p. 90.
  18. ^ Review of Connelly, John M. Schofield and the Politics of Command at Humanities and Social Sciences Online January 13, 2007
  19. ^ "Native History: 1638 Treaty of Hartford Meant to Quell Fear of Devil". indiancountrymedianetwork.com – Indian Country Media Network.
  20. ^ Soldiers and Civilians: The U.S. Army and the American People
  21. ^ Failures of the Presidents: From the Whiskey Rebellion and War of 1812 to the Bay of Pigs and War in Iraq
  22. ^ Theodore Rex, p. 165
  23. ^ Urban Disorder and the Shape of Belief: The Great Chicago Fire, the Haymarket Bomb, and the Model Town of Pullman, Second Edition
  24. ^ Iowa marriage records
  25. ^ Hinman, Ida (1895). The Washington Sketch Book.
  26. ^ John M. Schofield, Forty Six Years in the Army (1897) available at http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/21417
  27. ^ Burial Detail: Scholfiedl, John M (Section 2, Grave 1108) – ANC Explorer
  28. ^ ""Civil War Medal of Honor citations" (S–Z): Schofield, John M." AmericanCivilWar.com. Retrieved November 9, 2007.
  29. ^ United States Army Center of Military History. Archived from the original on February 23, 2009. Retrieved November 9, 2007.
  30. ^ Historical Register and Dictionary of the United States Army, 1789–1903. Francis B. Heitman. 1903. Volume 1. p. 865.

References Edit

  • Boatner, Mark M. III (1959). The Civil War Dictionary. New York: David McKay Company Inc. ISBN 0-679-50013-8.
  • Bobrick, Benson. Master of War: The Life of General George H. Thomas. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2009. ISBN 978-0-7432-9025-8.
  • Eicher, John H., and David J. Eicher. Civil War High Commands. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2001. ISBN 0-8047-3641-3.
  • Einolf, Christopher J. George Thomas: Virginian for the Union. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 2007. ISBN 978-0-8061-3867-1.
  • McDonough, James L. "John Schofield as Military Director of Reconstruction in Virginia." Civil War History, September 1969, pp. 237–256.
  • Schofield, John M. Forty-Six Years in the Army. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1998. ISBN 978-0-8061-3080-4. First published 1897 by The Century Co.
  • Shea, William L. (2009). Field of Blood: The Prairie Grove Campaign. Chapel Hill, NC: The University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-8078-3315-5.
  • Sword, Wiley (1992). The Confederacy's Last Hurrah: Spring Hill, Franklin, and Nashville. New York: University Press of Kansas for HarperCollins. ISBN 0-7006-0650-5.
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Schofield, John McAllister". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.

External links Edit

john, schofield, this, article, about, united, states, military, officer, other, uses, disambiguation, john, mcallister, schofield, september, 1831, march, 1906, american, soldier, held, major, commands, during, american, civil, appointed, secretary, 1868, 186. This article is about the United States military officer For other uses see John Schofield disambiguation John McAllister Schofield September 29 1831 March 4 1906 was an American soldier who held major commands during the American Civil War 1 He was appointed U S Secretary of War 1868 1869 under President Andrew Johnson and later served as Commanding General of the United States Army 1888 1895 2 John SchofieldCommanding General of the U S ArmyIn office August 14 1888 September 29 1895PresidentGrover ClevelandBenjamin HarrisonGrover ClevelandPreceded byPhilip SheridanSucceeded byNelson A Miles28th United States Secretary of WarIn office June 1 1868 March 13 1869PresidentAndrew JohnsonUlysses S GrantPreceded byEdwin StantonSucceeded byJohn Aaron RawlinsPersonal detailsBornJohn McAllister Schofield 1831 09 29 September 29 1831Gerry New York U S DiedMarch 4 1906 1906 03 04 aged 74 St Augustine Florida U S Resting placeArlington National CemeteryPolitical partyRepublicanEducationUnited States Military Academy BS SignatureMilitary serviceAllegiance United States UnionBranch serviceUnited States Army Union ArmyYears of service1853 18601861 1895RankLieutenant GeneralCommandsSuperintendent of the United States Military Academy 1876 1881 Army of the FrontierDepartment of the MissouriXXIII CorpsArmy of the OhioBattles warsAmerican Civil War Battle of Wilson s Creek Atlanta Campaign Battle of Utoy Creek Franklin Nashville campaign Battle of Franklin Battle of Nashville Campaign of the Carolinas Battle of Wyse ForkAwardsMedal of Honor Contents 1 Early life 2 Civil War 3 Reconstruction 4 Postbellum career 5 Personal life 6 Death and legacy 7 Medal of Honor citation 8 Dates of rank 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 External linksEarly life EditJohn McAllister Schofield was born September 29 1831 in Gerry Chautauqua County New York the son of the Reverend James Schofield 1801 1888 and his first wife the former Caroline McAllister Schofield 1810 1857 His father a Baptist minister in Sinclairville became a domestic missionary and moved his family which then included six children and would include 10 who survived infancy to Bristol Illinois When John was 12 they finally settled in Freeport Illinois where Rev Schofield became the town s first Baptist minister in 1845 and where he was ultimately buried in 1888 3 As a young man John Schofield was educated in the public schools helped his family farm and build their home and then surveyed land in northern Wisconsin before spending a year teaching school in Oneco Illinois not far from Freeport Then U S Rep Thomas J Turner secured John Schofield an appointment to the United States Military Academy at West Point He sold land for travel expenses and reported on June 1 1849 4 In his final year at the Academy while a teaching assistant in the mathematics section cadet Schofield was accused of allowing others in his classroom to make offensive jokes and drawings on the blackboard He was dismissed from West Point but after meeting with Illinois U S Senator Stephen A Douglas appealed the decision to the Secretary of War who referred the matter back to a Board of Inquiry at the Academy A majority of the review board voted to rescind the expulsion but one of the two officers who voted to sustain it cavalry and artillery instructor Lt George H Thomas later became a commander of Schofield during the Civil War Although Schofield s eventual memoirs did not mention Thomas on the review board his persistent criticism of Thomas s generalship after the war may reflect this incident 5 Schofield graduated in 1853 ranking seventh in his class and was commissioned a brevet second lieutenant in the artillery 6 Schofield served for two years in the artillery His first post was at Fort Moultrie South Carolina which he later noted involved the same guns that were used to bombard Fort Sumter in 1861 He then served at various places in Florida during the armed truce with the Seminole Nation but contracted fevers and dysentery and was ultimately evacuated with the assistance of future Confederate General A P Hill and recovered at Culpeper Virginia Upon regaining his health First Lieutenant Schofield returned to West Point as assistant professor of natural and experimental philosophy from 1855 to 1860 His career seemed stalled so he took leave 1860 1861 to work as professor of physics at Washington University in St Louis 4 Several of his brothers had settled in St Louis following the lead of his eldest brother Rev James Van Pelt Schofield 1825 1898 Civil War EditWhen the Civil War broke out Schofield helped assure Missouri did not join the Confederacy He became a major in the 1st Missouri Infantry Regiment and served as chief of staff to Maj Gen Nathaniel Lyon until Lyon s death during the Battle of Wilson s Creek Missouri in August 1861 Schofield acted with conspicuous gallantry during the battle and decades later received the Medal of Honor for that action 7 Schofield was promoted to brigadier general of volunteers on November 21 1861 From 1861 to 1863 he held various commands in the Trans Mississippi Theater He commanded the District of St Louis from that date to 10 April 1862 the Military District of Missouri from 5 June to 24 September 1862 and the District of Southwest Missouri to 10 November 1862 He led the Army of the Frontier from 12 October 1862 to 30 May 1863 He was promoted to major general of volunteers on November 29 1862 at the age of 31 making him one of the youngest major generals in the Civil War 8 On 30 September 1862 a Federal brigade suffered a defeat at the First Battle of Newtonia in southwest Missouri Both James G Blunt and Schofield rushed to Newtonia Missouri with reinforcements and sent the Confederate force fleeing south into Arkansas The department commander Samuel Ryan Curtis created the Army of the Frontier with Schofield in command Blunt led the 1st Division James Totten the 2nd Division and Francis J Herron the 3rd Division The army numbered 20 000 men but probably 14 000 were fit for duty Schofield s army crossed into northwest Arkansas on 17 October 9 Blunt s division soon moved west into Indian Territory where it won the Battle of Old Fort Wayne on 22 October 10 Meanwhile Schofield with the 2nd and 3rd Divisions occupied Huntsville Arkansas 11 Schofield s troops clashed with forces led by Thomas C Hindman and the Confederates retreated south on 29 October 12 On 4 November with the approval of Curtis Schofield s two divisions withdrew northeast to Springfield Missouri while Blunt s division remained in northwest Arkansas 13 He was eventually relieved of duty in the West at his own request due to altercations with his superior Samuel R Curtis From 17 April to 10 May 1863 Schofield led the 3rd Division in the XIV Corps Army of the Cumberland He returned to Missouri as commander of the Department of Missouri from 24 May 1863 to 30 January 1864 8 His command in Missouri was marred by controversy after a massacre at Lawrence Kansas when Schofield refused to allow a posse to pursue the combatants into Missouri Pro Union Missourians sent a delegation to Washington DC in October to plead with President Lincoln to dismiss Schofield for sympathizing with pro Confederate Bushwhacker para military marauders who were attacking loyal Union citizens Lincoln backed Schofield s position attributed the carnage to wartime conditions rather than the commander s inadequacy and instructed Schofield to respect civil liberties unless assemblies or newspapers were working palpable harm to the military 14 In 1864 as commander of the Army of the Ohio Schofield participated in the Atlanta Campaign under Major General William T Sherman Sherman placed him in command of a major operation to break the rail lines in late July 1864 Schofield became embroiled in another controversy with the commander of the US XIV Corps Volunteer Major General John Palmer who resigned rather than serve under Schofield whom he considered to be of lower rank but whom Gen Sherman backed at Utoy Creek becoming the only resignation during a major operation in U S history although Palmer was ultimately reassigned to Kentucky and helped maintain federal control over that border state Schofield with his XXIII Corps and the XIV Corps then spent the month in front of Atlanta and East Point with lackluster results Sherman resorted to a flanking movement to defeat the Confederates under Hood Schofield was sent to cut off Hardee s retreat at Jonesboro but failed to move He became embroiled in a further controversy when placed under General Stanley commanding the US IV Corps on August 30 1864 nbsp John Schofield during the Civil WarSherman after the fall of Atlanta took the majority of his forces on a March to the Sea through Georgia Schofield s Army of the Ohio was detached to join Major General George H Thomas in Tennessee When Confederate General John Bell Hood invaded Tennessee and nearly cut off Schofield s command at Spring Hill Hood s rash assault to regain momentum at the subsequent Battle of Franklin resulted in a significant defeat On December 15 16 Schofield took part in Thomas s crowning victory at the Battle of Nashville where Hood s Army of Tennessee was decisively defeated and effectively destroyed as a fighting force for the remainder of the war However during the buildup towards the battle Schofield intrigued against Thomas feeding Grant false information in order to try to succeed his senior in command 15 For his services at Franklin he was awarded the rank of brigadier general in the regular army on November 30 1864 and the brevet rank of major general on March 13 1865 6 Ordered to operate with Sherman in North Carolina Schofield moved his corps by rail and sea to Fort Fisher North Carolina in 17 days occupied Wilmington on February 22 1865 fought the action at Kinston on March 10 and on March 23 joined Sherman at Goldsboro Reconstruction EditAfter the war President Andrew Johnson sent Schofield on a special diplomatic mission to France urging withdrawal of French troops in Mexico General Schofield also joined the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States a military society composed of officers of the Union armed forces and their descendants After retiring from active duty Schofield served as the Order s commander in chief from 1899 to 1903 During Reconstruction President Johnson appointed Schofield to serve as military governor of Virginia and of the First Military District Thus he oversaw the elections in which blacks and whites voted which resulted in the Virginia Constitutional Convention of 1868 When Radicals took over that convention and proposed to disenfranchise former Confederates Schofield voiced concerns about corruption to Congress as well as his commander General Ulysses Grant Schofield s position was of high importance and sensitivity due to the region s proximity to Washington as well as Confederate President Jefferson Davis s incarceration in Norfolk and awaiting trial under Judge John Curtiss Underwood who chaired the Constitutional Convention and had close links with Congressional Republicans After President Johnson forced Edwin M Stanton a Radical Republican who had served as Secretary of War since 1862 to resign Schofield served as Secretary of War from June 1868 to March 1869 Postbellum career EditSchofield was promoted to major general in the Regular Army on March 4 1869 the same day General Ulysses S Grant was sworn in as president of the United States Schofield then served for a year as head of the Department of Missouri the Army s second largest military department Following General George Thomas death Schofield succeeded him in commanding the Military Division of the Pacific the country s largest In 1873 Schofield was given a secret task by Secretary of War William Belknap to investigate the strategic potential of a United States presence in the Hawaiian Islands Schofield s report recommended that the United States establish a naval port at Pearl Harbor Starting in 1876 until 1881 Schofield became superintendent of the United States Military Academy A major focus was reducing hazing and increasing professionalism within the academy In 1878 Schofield drew the ire of Radical Republicans when President Rutherford B Hayes asked him to reopen the case of Major General Fitz John Porter who had been convicted by a court martial for cowardice and disobedience at the Second Battle of Bull Run Schofield s review board used new evidence from Confederate generals who had participated in the battle and then found that Porter had been wrongly convicted and that his actions might have saved the entire Union army from complete defeat caused by the ineptitude of Maj Gens John Pope and Irvin McDowell On April 5 1880 an African American cadet at West Point Johnson Chesnut Whittaker was found bruised and beaten in his cot He claimed that he had been attacked by fellow cadets but the administration claimed he had fabricated his story to win sympathy Whittaker was court martialed and expelled for allegedly faking an assault on himself staged by his fellow cadets A Congressional investigation into the incident resulted in Schofield s removal from his post as superintendent in 1881 Schofield then served in the Department of the Gulf 1881 82 the Military Division of the Pacific 1882 83 the Military Division of the Missouri 1883 86 and the Military Division of the Atlantic 1886 88 He also went to France to witness military maneuvers there Gen Schofield was also the first President of the Army and Navy Club founded 1885 incorporated 1891 16 nbsp Official U S Army Chiefs of Staff portrait by Stephen W Shaw 1874 17 Upon the death of General Philip Sheridan in 1888 General Schofield by virtue of his seniority in rank became the commanding general of the United States Army He supported military professionalism including subordination to the civilian Secretary of War Schofield also supported adoption of lineal promotions and initiated performance reviews which limited political patronage considerations from the promotion process 18 Writing from South Dakota General Schofield seconded a report of General Thomas H Ruger which urged the federal government to honor treaty obligations with Native Americans 19 General Schofield received the Medal of Honor on July 2 1892 for his actions at the Battle of Wilson s Creek in 1861 During the unrest of the Pullman Strike Schofield worked with President Cleveland in a discreet advisory role 20 21 22 23 On February 5 1895 he was promoted to the rank of lieutenant general Lieutenant General Schofield retired on September 29 1895 upon reaching the mandatory retirement age of 64 However he remained active in government affairs supporting Elihu Root testifying before congressional committees in support of the Army Reorganization Act of 1901 and the Dick Act of 1903 which established the U S National Guard Personal life Edit nbsp Georgia Wells Kilbourne the second Mrs SchofieldJohn Schofield married Harriet Whitehorn Bartlett daughter of W F C Bartlett Chairman of West Point s Department of Philosophy and they had two daughters and four sons Two sons John 1858 1868 and Henry 1862 1863 died before reaching adulthood William Bartlett Schofield 1860 1906 survived to adulthood and began a U S Army career rising to Major as did Richmond McAlister Schofield 1867 1941 After Harriet died in 1888 she was buried with her father and son John in the United States Military Academy Post cemetery At age 60 in Keokuk Iowa in June 1891 Schofield remarried to 27 year old Georgia Wells Kilbourne with whom he had a daughter Georgiana 24 Georgia Wells Kilbourne was a native of Keokuk Iowa She was the daughter of George Kilbourne and was named Georgia for her father She attended school in New York and afterwards studied abroad General Schofield and Kilbourne were married in 1891 Her mother Mrs Kilbourne and her younger sister Miss Emma Kilbourne spent a part of the year at her Washington home Emma Kilbourne had a literary predilection devoting much of her time to reading and study 25 nbsp Emma KilbourneDuring his military career perhaps because of his reformer image Schofield was dogged by accusations of favoritism toward family members His brother George Wheeler Schofield 1833 1882 also became a brevet Brigadier General of U S Volunteers during the American Civil War originally volunteering with the 1st Missouri Volunteer Infantry in November 1861 and promoted to Captain in the 1st Missouri Light Artillery after the Siege of Vicksburg and rising to command the 2nd Regiment Missouri Volunteer Light artillery and ultimately being commissioned as a Major in the Regular Army after the Civil War and serving in the 10th Cavalry and later the 6th Cavalry on the Western Frontier and for whom the 45 caliber Smith and Wesson Schofield revolver was named Another brother Charles Brewster Schofield 1849 1901 graduated from West Point in 1870 C B Schofield later served as his Gen J M Schofield s aide during the Indian Wars from 1878 to 1885 After rising to the rank of Captain during the Spanish American War he died of a heart attack in Matanzas Cuba in 1901 and was also buried at Arlington National Cemetery While Gen John Schofield was in charge of Military District No 1 in Virginia his brother Elisha McAllister Schofield 1835 1870 was the assessor for the City of Richmond Virginia and was among many killed on April 26 1870 as a result of the infamous collapse of the balcony at the State Capitol during a session of the Virginia Court of Appeals His son in law Brig Gen Avery Delano Andrews and his wife Mary Campbell Schofield Andrews are also buried at Arlington National Cemetery Death and legacy EditBefore his death Schofield became the last surviving member of Andrew Johnson s cabinet His memoirs Forty six Years in the Army were published in 1897 26 General Schofield became an honorary companion of the Military Order of Foreign Wars General Schofield died at St Augustine Florida on March 4 1906 He is buried in Arlington National Cemetery 27 6 Schofield Barracks Hawaii are named in his honor Today Schofield is also remembered for a lengthy quotation that all cadets at the United States Military Academy at West Point The Citadel Officer Candidate School at Fort Benning and the United States Air Force Academy are required to memorize It is an excerpt from his graduation address to the class of 1879 at West Point The discipline which makes the soldiers of a free country reliable in battle is not to be gained by harsh or tyrannical treatment On the contrary such treatment is far more likely to destroy than to make an army It is possible to impart instruction and give commands in such a manner and such a tone of voice as to inspire in the soldier no feeling but an intense desire to obey while the opposite manner and tone of voice cannot fail to excite strong resentment and a desire to disobey The one mode or other of dealing with subordinates springs from a corresponding spirit in the breast of the commander He who feels the respect which is due to others cannot fail to inspire in them respect for himself While he who feels and hence manifests disrespect towards others especially his subordinates cannot fail to inspire hatred against himself John M SchofieldMedal of Honor citation Edit nbsp Rank and organization Major 1st Missouri Infantry Place and date At Wilsons Creek Mo August 10 1861 Entered service at St Louis Mo Born September 29 1831 Gerry N Y Date of issue July 2 1892 Citation Was conspicuously gallant in leading a regiment in a successful charge versus the enemy 28 29 The medal was recommended by Schofield himself when he was interim U S Secretary of War 1868 69 Historian Benson Bobrick is critical of this and notes the vagueness of the details in the citation 7 General Schofield was posthumously entitled to the Civil War Campaign Medal and the Indian Campaign Medal Both medals were created in 1907 a year after Schofield died Dates of rank EditInsignia Rank Date Component nbsp Brevet Second Lieutenant July 1 1853 2nd Artillery nbsp Second Lieutenant August 31 1853 1st Artillery nbsp First Lieutenant March 3 1855 1st Artillery nbsp Major April 26 1861 1st Missouri Infantry nbsp Captain May 14 1861 1st Artillery nbsp Major June 26 1861 1st Missouri Artillery nbsp Brigadier General November 21 1861 Volunteers nbsp Major General November 29 1862 Volunteers nbsp Brigadier General March 4 1863 Volunteers nbsp Major General May 12 1863 Volunteers nbsp Brigadier General November 30 1864 Regular Army nbsp Brevet Major General March 13 1865 Regular Army nbsp Major General March 4 1869 Regular Army nbsp Lieutenant General February 5 1895 Regular Army 30 See also Edit nbsp Biography portal nbsp American Civil War portalList of Medal of Honor recipients List of American Civil War Medal of Honor recipients Q S List of American Civil War generals Union Notes Edit John Mcallister Schofield U S Civil War U S Army Medal of Honor Recipient Congressional Medal of Honor Society Retrieved 2022 03 16 Schofield was Secretary of War 6 1 1868 to 3 13 1869 Grant took office on 3 4 1869 While it is technically correct that Schofield held the office under Grant for 10 days it is misleading and confusing to suggest he served as Secretary of War for both presidents Schofield had the position as a lame duck during the transition period between presidential administrations Military order of the Loyal Legion In Memoriaam Companion Lieutenant General John McAllister Schofield P 8 available at google books ID Yi5caaaaiaaj a b In Memoriam pp 8 9 Einolf p 64 Schofield pp 13 14 a b c Eicher pp 472 73 a b Bobrick p 288 states Much later as secretary of war 1868 69 he would award himself the Congressional Medal of Honor actual award was in 1892 for undocumented valor at Wilson s Creek a b Boatner 1959 p 726 Shea 2009 pp 27 29 Shea 2009 pp 37 41 Shea 2009 p 47 Shea 2009 p 59 Shea 2009 p 63 The Missouri Troubles President Lincoln s Reply to the Missouri Delegation Gen Schofield Sustained The New York Times October 24 1863 Bobrick pp 287 88 329 31 336 37 imdb Bell William Gardner 2005 Commanding Generals and Chiefs of Staff 1775 2005 Washington D C Center of Military History United States Army p 90 Review of Connelly John M Schofield and the Politics of Command at Humanities and Social Sciences Online January 13 2007 Native History 1638 Treaty of Hartford Meant to Quell Fear of Devil indiancountrymedianetwork com Indian Country Media Network Soldiers and Civilians The U S Army and the American People Failures of the Presidents From the Whiskey Rebellion and War of 1812 to the Bay of Pigs and War in Iraq Theodore Rex p 165 Urban Disorder and the Shape of Belief The Great Chicago Fire the Haymarket Bomb and the Model Town of Pullman Second Edition Iowa marriage records Hinman Ida 1895 The Washington Sketch Book John M Schofield Forty Six Years in the Army 1897 available at http www gutenberg org ebooks 21417 Burial Detail Scholfiedl John M Section 2 Grave 1108 ANC Explorer Civil War Medal of Honor citations S Z Schofield John M AmericanCivilWar com Retrieved November 9 2007 Medal of Honor website M Z Schofield John M United States Army Center of Military History Archived from the original on February 23 2009 Retrieved November 9 2007 Historical Register and Dictionary of the United States Army 1789 1903 Francis B Heitman 1903 Volume 1 p 865 References EditBoatner Mark M III 1959 The Civil War Dictionary New York David McKay Company Inc ISBN 0 679 50013 8 Bobrick Benson Master of War The Life of General George H Thomas New York Simon amp Schuster 2009 ISBN 978 0 7432 9025 8 Eicher John H and David J Eicher Civil War High Commands Stanford CA Stanford University Press 2001 ISBN 0 8047 3641 3 Einolf Christopher J George Thomas Virginian for the Union Norman University of Oklahoma Press 2007 ISBN 978 0 8061 3867 1 McDonough James L John Schofield as Military Director of Reconstruction in Virginia Civil War History September 1969 pp 237 256 Schofield John M Forty Six Years in the Army Norman University of Oklahoma Press 1998 ISBN 978 0 8061 3080 4 First published 1897 by The Century Co Shea William L 2009 Field of Blood The Prairie Grove Campaign Chapel Hill NC The University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0 8078 3315 5 Sword Wiley 1992 The Confederacy s Last Hurrah Spring Hill Franklin and Nashville New York University Press of Kansas for HarperCollins ISBN 0 7006 0650 5 nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Schofield John McAllister Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press External links EditWorks by John McAllister Schofield at Project Gutenberg Works by or about John Schofield at Internet Archive Schofield John McAllister Appletons Cyclopaedia of American Biography 1900 John Schofield Claim to Fame Medal of Honor recipients Find a Grave Retrieved November 8 2007 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Schofield amp oldid 1176434129, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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