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John W. Geary

John White Geary (December 30, 1819 – February 8, 1873) was an American lawyer, politician, Freemason, and a Union general in the American Civil War. He was the final alcalde and first mayor of San Francisco, a governor of the Kansas Territory, and the 16th governor of Pennsylvania.[1]

John W. Geary
Geary in the Civil War
16th Governor of Pennsylvania
In office
January 15, 1867 – January 21, 1873
Preceded byAndrew Gregg Curtin
Succeeded byJohn F. Hartranft
1st Mayor of San Francisco
In office
May 1, 1850 – May 4, 1851
Preceded byHimself as Alcalde
Succeeded byCharles James Brenham
Alcalde of San Francisco
In office
August 1, 1849 – May 1, 1850
Succeeded byHimself as Mayor
3rd Territorial Governor of Kansas
In office
September 9, 1856 – March 20, 1857
Preceded byWilson Shannon
Succeeded byRobert J. Walker
Personal details
Born
John White Geary

(1819-12-30)December 30, 1819
Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania
DiedFebruary 8, 1873(1873-02-08) (aged 53)
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania
Political partyRepublican
Other political
affiliations
Democratic (until 1866)
Spouse(s)Margaret Ann Logan (widowed); Mary Church Henderson
ProfessionTeacher, Clerk, Land Speculator, Engineer, Soldier
Signature
Military service
Branch/serviceUnited States Army
Union Army
Years of service1846–1848, 1861–1865
Rank Brigadier General
Brevet Major General
Battles/warsMexican–American War
American Civil War

Early years edit

Geary was born near Mount Pleasant, Pennsylvania, in Westmoreland County—in what is today the Pittsburgh metropolitan area. He was the son of Richard Geary, an ironmaster and schoolmaster of Scotch-Irish descent,[2] and Margaret White, a native of Maryland. Starting at the age of 14, he attended nearby Jefferson College in Canonsburg, Pennsylvania, studying civil engineering and law, but was forced to leave before graduation due to the death of his father, whose debts he assumed. He worked at a variety of jobs, including as a surveyor and land speculator in Kentucky, earning enough to return to college and graduate in 1841. He worked as a construction engineer for the Allegheny Portage Railroad. In 1843, he married Margaret Ann Logan, with whom he had several sons, but she died in 1853. Geary then married the widowed Mary Church Henderson in 1858 in Carlisle, Pennsylvania.

Geary was active in the state militia as a teenager. In December 1846, during the Mexican–American War, he was commissioned in the 2nd Pennsylvania Infantry, serving as lieutenant colonel. He led the regiment heroically at Chapultepec, and was wounded five times in the process.[3] Geary was an excellent target for enemy fire: a huge man for that era, he stood six feet six inches tall, 260 pounds (118 kg) and solidly built. Altogether, he was wounded at least ten times in his military career. Geary's exploits at Belén Gate earned him the rank of colonel and he returned home a war hero.

California politics edit

Moving west, Geary was appointed postmaster of San Francisco by President James K. Polk on January 22, 1849, and on January 8 1850, he was elected[4] the city's alcalde, before California became a state, and then the first mayor of the city. Aged thirty at the time of his appointment, he holds the record as the youngest mayor in San Francisco history. As alcalde, he served as the city's judge in addition to the city's mayor.[5] Geary returned to Pennsylvania in 1852 because of his wife's failing health. After her death, President Franklin Pierce wanted to appoint him governor of the Utah Territory, but Geary declined.

Territorial Governor of Kansas edit

Geary accepted Pierce's appointment as governor of the Kansas Territory on July 31, 1856. Proslavery forces opposed Geary, favoring instead either acting governor Daniel Woodson or Surveyor General John Calhoun (an Illinois politician). Geary spent a month preparing for his new position and then left for the territory. While traveling up the Missouri River, his boat docked at Glasgow, Missouri, where he happened upon recently fired governor Wilson Shannon. They briefly discussed the "Bleeding Kansas" crisis and Geary had previously met with Missouri governor Sterling Price, who promised Geary that Free-staters would be allowed safe passage through Missouri.

Geary arrived at Fort Leavenworth on September 9 and went to the territorial capital at Lecompton the following day, becoming the youngest territorial governor of Kansas. He believed that his previous administrative experience in government would help bring peace to the territory, but he was unable to stop the violence. He told his first audience, "I desire to know no party, no section, no North, no South, no East, no West; nothing but Kansas and my country."[6] Geary disbanded the existing Kansas militia, organized a new state militia, and relied heavily on federal troops to help keep order. On October 17, he started a twenty-day tour of the territory and spoke to groups everywhere he stopped to gain their opinions.

Despite his efforts to be a neutral peacemaker, Geary and the proslavery legislature clashed. Geary stopped a large force of Missouri border ruffians who were heading to Lawrence to once again burn the town. Additionally, he vetoed a bill which would provide for an election of delegates to the Lecompton constitutional convention. This bill would have bypassed any referendum on a constitution before being submitted to the U.S. Congress for ratification. The legislature, however, overrode the veto.

Geary also angered Free-staters when he turned away $20,000 from the Vermont legislature that was intended to help the suffering from the harsh winter of 1856–57. Geary wrote in his response, "[there is] doubtless some suffering ... consequent upon the past disturbances and the present extremely cold weather; but probably no more than exists in other territories or in either of the states of the Union."[7]

Initially, Geary solidly abhorred the proposals he received from Kansas abolitionists. By the time of the 1856 presidential election, however, he had completely reversed his position and had become intimate friends with Charles Robinson and Samuel Pomeroy. Additionally, he totally distrusted the proslavery forces and in letters to President Pierce, he blamed them for the deprivations in the territory. Geary even went so far as to reject his candidacy from the Democratic party of Kansas for the U.S. Senate. Instead, he worked with the Free-staters to create a plan for Kansas to be admitted to the Union under the Topeka constitution as a free state, with himself as governor of a Democratic administration. Support for this plan in Congress was lacking.[8]

Geary soon began to fear for his personal safety after his private secretary, Dr. John Gihon, was assaulted by proslavery ruffians. Geary submitted his resignation to incoming President James Buchanan, expecting that he would be reappointed. Instead, Buchanan fired Geary on March 12, 1857, with an effective date of March 20. In his farewell message to the territory, Geary stated that he had not sought the office and "[that it] was by no means desirable." He added, "most of the troubles which lately agitated the territory, were occasioned by men who had no especial interest in its welfare... The great body of the actual citizens are conservative, law-abiding and peace-loving men, disposed rather to make sacrifices for conciliation and consequent peace, than to insist for their entire rights should the general body thereby be caused to suffer."[9]

Armed with two guns, Geary left the territory during the night on March 21 and returned to Washington, D.C. Afterward, he spoke at many public meetings about the dangers in Kansas. Although he did not bring peace to the territory, Geary's administration did leave the territory more peaceful than it had been before his arrival. Geary returned to his Pennsylvania farm and remarried.

Civil War edit

At the start of the Civil War, Geary raised the 147th and 28th Pennsylvania Infantry regiments and became colonel of the latter. Commanding the district of the upper Potomac River, he was wounded and captured near Leesburg, Virginia, on March 8, 1862, but was immediately exchanged and returned to duty. On April 25, 1862, he was promoted to Brigadier General, U.S. Volunteers and the command of a brigade in Maj. Gen. Nathaniel Banks's corps, which he led in the Shenandoah Valley against Thomas J. "Stonewall" Jackson. His brigade joined Maj. Gen. John Pope's Army of Virginia in late June. He led it at the Battle of Cedar Mountain on August 9, 1862, where he was seriously wounded in the arm and leg. He returned to duty on October 15 as the division commander; the corps was now part of the Army of the Potomac, designated the XII Corps, under the command of Maj. Gen. Henry W. Slocum.

Geary's division was heavily engaged at Chancellorsville, where he was knocked unconscious as a cannonball shot past his head on May 3, 1863. (Some accounts state that he was hit in the chest with a cannonball.)

At the Battle of Gettysburg, Slocum's corps arrived after the first day's (July 1, 1863) fighting subsided and took up a defensive position on Culp's Hill, the extreme right of the Union line. On the second day, heavy fighting on the Union left demanded reinforcements and Geary was ordered to leave a single brigade, under Brig. Gen. George S. Greene, on Culp's Hill and follow another division, which was just departing. Geary lost track of the division he was supposed to follow south on the Baltimore Pike and inexplicably marched completely off the battlefield, eventually reaching Rock Creek. His two brigades finally returned to Culp's Hill by 9:00 pm that night, arriving in the midst of a fierce fire fight between a Confederate division and Greene's lone brigade. This embarrassing incident might have damaged his reputation except for two factors: the part of the battle he was supposed to march to join had ended, so he wasn't really needed; and, because of a dispute between army commander Maj. Gen. George G. Meade and Slocum over the filing of their official reports, little public notice ensued.

The XII Corps was transferred west to join the besieged Union army at Chattanooga. Geary's son Edward died in his arms at the Battle of Wauhatchie, enraging him sufficiently to prevail in a battle in which his division was greatly outnumbered. He distinguished himself in command during the Battle of Lookout Mountain, the entire Atlanta Campaign, Sherman's March to the Sea, and the Carolinas Campaign. He oversaw the surrender of Savannah, Georgia, and briefly served as the city's military governor, where he was breveted to major general.

Governor of Pennsylvania and death edit

 
Opposition poster for the 1866 election. Geary's opponent, Hiester Clymer, ran on a white supremacy platform.

After the war, Geary served two terms as the Republican governor of Pennsylvania, from 1867 to 1873. He established a reputation as a political independent, attacking the political influence of the railroads and vetoing many special interest bills.

On February 8, 1873, less than three weeks after leaving the governor's post, Geary was fatally stricken with a heart attack while preparing breakfast for his infant son in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. He was 53 years old. He was buried in Harrisburg with state honors in Mount Kalmia Cemetery, now, the Harrisburg Cemetery.

Freemasonry edit

Geary was made a Mason at Sight on January 4, 1847, in Pennsylvania (Philanthropy Lodge #255), just before he left with his troops to fight in the Mexican War. During the Civil War, he was the commanding Union general at the fall of Savannah, Georgia. He placed Federal troops about the quarters of Solomon's Lodge No. 1 to save it from looting and damage. Later, while Geary was governor of Pennsylvania, the Lodge sent him a resolution of thanks. He answered by claiming it was the principles and tenets of Freemasonry that helped Reconstruction to be as successful as it finally turned out to be. In this reply, he said: "... I feel again justified in referring to our beloved institution, by saying that to Freemasonry the people of the country are indebted for many mitigations of the suffering caused by the direful passions of war."[10]

In memoriam edit

Geary County, Kansas, was renamed in honor of John W. Geary in 1889 (previously named Davis County for Jefferson Davis, it was renamed at the insistence of its citizens; in 1893, the county electorate rejected an attempt to restore the Davis County name), as is Geary Boulevard in San Francisco, a major artery in that city, Geary Avenue on the field at Gettysburg, Geary Street in New Cumberland, Pennsylvania (where Geary owned a home), Geary Street in Harrisburg, the capital of Pennsylvania, and Geary Hall, an undergraduate dorm building in East Halls at Pennsylvania State University. There is a monument to Geary in the town center of Mount Pleasant, Pennsylvania. Geary, Kansas (in Doniphan County) was also named in his honor, but the town ceased to exist in 1905. In 1914, a monument to Geary was erected on Culp's Hill at Gettysburg, but it was not formally dedicated until August 11, 2007.[11]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "The Governors of Pennsylvania." Mount Union, Pennsylvania: The Mount Union Times, January 27, 1911, p. 1 (subscription required).
  2. ^ "John White Geary". Genealogy.com. Retrieved September 19, 2015.
  3. ^ Eicher, p. 251; Tagg, p. 155; Warner, p. 169.
  4. ^ "Daily Alta California". Vol. 1, no. 15. January 11, 1850. p. 2. Retrieved August 24, 2014.
  5. ^ "Daily Alta California". Vol. 1, no. 51. February 27, 1850. p. 4. Retrieved August 24, 2014.
  6. ^ Blackmar, I:p. 270
  7. ^ Gihon, p. 216
  8. ^ Johnson, pp. 233–234
  9. ^ Gihon, pp. 293–299
  10. ^ Freemasonry in the Civil War March 30, 2012, at the Wayback Machine.
  11. ^ Pittsburgh Tribune-Review article[permanent dead link].

References edit

  • Blackmar, Frank W. . 2 vols. Chicago: Standard Publishing, 1912. OCLC 2996736.
  • Eicher, John H., and David J. Eicher. Civil War High Commands. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2001. ISBN 0-8047-3641-3.
  • Geary, John W. A Politician Goes to War: The Civil War Letters of John White Geary. Edited by William Alan Blair. University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 1995. ISBN 0-271-01338-9.
  • Gihon, John H. Geary and Kansas: Governor Geary's Administration in Kansas with a Complete History of the Territory until July 1857. Philadelphia: Charles C. Rhodes, 1857. OCLC 247108072.
  • Johnson, Samuel A. The Battle Cry of Freedom: The New England Emigrant Aid Company in the Kansas Crusade. Lawrence: University of Kansas Press, 1954. OCLC 192098112.
  • Socolofsky, Homer E. Kansas Governors. Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 1990. ISBN 0-7006-0421-9.
  • Tagg, Larry. . Campbell, CA: Savas Publishing, 1998. ISBN 1-882810-30-9.
  • Warner, Ezra J. Generals in Blue: Lives of the Union Commanders. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1964. ISBN 0-8071-0822-7.

External links edit

Party political offices
Preceded by Republican nominee for Governor of Pennsylvania
1866, 1869
Succeeded by
Political offices
New office Mayor of San Francisco
May 1, 1850 – May 4, 1851
Succeeded by
Preceded by Territorial Governor of Kansas
September 9, 1856 – March 20, 1857
Succeeded by
Preceded by Governor of Pennsylvania
January 15, 1867 – January 21, 1873
Succeeded by

john, geary, member, fenian, brotherhood, john, geary, john, white, geary, december, 1819, february, 1873, american, lawyer, politician, freemason, union, general, american, civil, final, alcalde, first, mayor, francisco, governor, kansas, territory, 16th, gov. For the member of the Fenian Brotherhood see John J Geary John White Geary December 30 1819 February 8 1873 was an American lawyer politician Freemason and a Union general in the American Civil War He was the final alcalde and first mayor of San Francisco a governor of the Kansas Territory and the 16th governor of Pennsylvania 1 John W GearyGeary in the Civil War16th Governor of PennsylvaniaIn office January 15 1867 January 21 1873Preceded byAndrew Gregg CurtinSucceeded byJohn F Hartranft1st Mayor of San FranciscoIn office May 1 1850 May 4 1851Preceded byHimself as AlcaldeSucceeded byCharles James BrenhamAlcalde of San FranciscoIn office August 1 1849 May 1 1850Succeeded byHimself as Mayor3rd Territorial Governor of KansasIn office September 9 1856 March 20 1857Preceded byWilson ShannonSucceeded byRobert J WalkerPersonal detailsBornJohn White Geary 1819 12 30 December 30 1819Westmoreland County PennsylvaniaDiedFebruary 8 1873 1873 02 08 aged 53 Harrisburg PennsylvaniaPolitical partyRepublicanOther politicalaffiliationsDemocratic until 1866 Spouse s Margaret Ann Logan widowed Mary Church HendersonProfessionTeacher Clerk Land Speculator Engineer SoldierSignatureMilitary serviceBranch serviceUnited States ArmyUnion ArmyYears of service1846 1848 1861 1865RankBrigadier General Brevet Major GeneralBattles warsMexican American WarAmerican Civil War Contents 1 Early years 2 California politics 3 Territorial Governor of Kansas 4 Civil War 5 Governor of Pennsylvania and death 6 Freemasonry 7 In memoriam 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 External linksEarly years editGeary was born near Mount Pleasant Pennsylvania in Westmoreland County in what is today the Pittsburgh metropolitan area He was the son of Richard Geary an ironmaster and schoolmaster of Scotch Irish descent 2 and Margaret White a native of Maryland Starting at the age of 14 he attended nearby Jefferson College in Canonsburg Pennsylvania studying civil engineering and law but was forced to leave before graduation due to the death of his father whose debts he assumed He worked at a variety of jobs including as a surveyor and land speculator in Kentucky earning enough to return to college and graduate in 1841 He worked as a construction engineer for the Allegheny Portage Railroad In 1843 he married Margaret Ann Logan with whom he had several sons but she died in 1853 Geary then married the widowed Mary Church Henderson in 1858 in Carlisle Pennsylvania Geary was active in the state militia as a teenager In December 1846 during the Mexican American War he was commissioned in the 2nd Pennsylvania Infantry serving as lieutenant colonel He led the regiment heroically at Chapultepec and was wounded five times in the process 3 Geary was an excellent target for enemy fire a huge man for that era he stood six feet six inches tall 260 pounds 118 kg and solidly built Altogether he was wounded at least ten times in his military career Geary s exploits at Belen Gate earned him the rank of colonel and he returned home a war hero California politics editMoving west Geary was appointed postmaster of San Francisco by President James K Polk on January 22 1849 and on January 8 1850 he was elected 4 the city s alcalde before California became a state and then the first mayor of the city Aged thirty at the time of his appointment he holds the record as the youngest mayor in San Francisco history As alcalde he served as the city s judge in addition to the city s mayor 5 Geary returned to Pennsylvania in 1852 because of his wife s failing health After her death President Franklin Pierce wanted to appoint him governor of the Utah Territory but Geary declined Territorial Governor of Kansas editGeary accepted Pierce s appointment as governor of the Kansas Territory on July 31 1856 Proslavery forces opposed Geary favoring instead either acting governor Daniel Woodson or Surveyor General John Calhoun an Illinois politician Geary spent a month preparing for his new position and then left for the territory While traveling up the Missouri River his boat docked at Glasgow Missouri where he happened upon recently fired governor Wilson Shannon They briefly discussed the Bleeding Kansas crisis and Geary had previously met with Missouri governor Sterling Price who promised Geary that Free staters would be allowed safe passage through Missouri Geary arrived at Fort Leavenworth on September 9 and went to the territorial capital at Lecompton the following day becoming the youngest territorial governor of Kansas He believed that his previous administrative experience in government would help bring peace to the territory but he was unable to stop the violence He told his first audience I desire to know no party no section no North no South no East no West nothing but Kansas and my country 6 Geary disbanded the existing Kansas militia organized a new state militia and relied heavily on federal troops to help keep order On October 17 he started a twenty day tour of the territory and spoke to groups everywhere he stopped to gain their opinions Despite his efforts to be a neutral peacemaker Geary and the proslavery legislature clashed Geary stopped a large force of Missouri border ruffians who were heading to Lawrence to once again burn the town Additionally he vetoed a bill which would provide for an election of delegates to the Lecompton constitutional convention This bill would have bypassed any referendum on a constitution before being submitted to the U S Congress for ratification The legislature however overrode the veto Geary also angered Free staters when he turned away 20 000 from the Vermont legislature that was intended to help the suffering from the harsh winter of 1856 57 Geary wrote in his response there is doubtless some suffering consequent upon the past disturbances and the present extremely cold weather but probably no more than exists in other territories or in either of the states of the Union 7 Initially Geary solidly abhorred the proposals he received from Kansas abolitionists By the time of the 1856 presidential election however he had completely reversed his position and had become intimate friends with Charles Robinson and Samuel Pomeroy Additionally he totally distrusted the proslavery forces and in letters to President Pierce he blamed them for the deprivations in the territory Geary even went so far as to reject his candidacy from the Democratic party of Kansas for the U S Senate Instead he worked with the Free staters to create a plan for Kansas to be admitted to the Union under the Topeka constitution as a free state with himself as governor of a Democratic administration Support for this plan in Congress was lacking 8 Geary soon began to fear for his personal safety after his private secretary Dr John Gihon was assaulted by proslavery ruffians Geary submitted his resignation to incoming President James Buchanan expecting that he would be reappointed Instead Buchanan fired Geary on March 12 1857 with an effective date of March 20 In his farewell message to the territory Geary stated that he had not sought the office and that it was by no means desirable He added most of the troubles which lately agitated the territory were occasioned by men who had no especial interest in its welfare The great body of the actual citizens are conservative law abiding and peace loving men disposed rather to make sacrifices for conciliation and consequent peace than to insist for their entire rights should the general body thereby be caused to suffer 9 Armed with two guns Geary left the territory during the night on March 21 and returned to Washington D C Afterward he spoke at many public meetings about the dangers in Kansas Although he did not bring peace to the territory Geary s administration did leave the territory more peaceful than it had been before his arrival Geary returned to his Pennsylvania farm and remarried Civil War editAt the start of the Civil War Geary raised the 147th and 28th Pennsylvania Infantry regiments and became colonel of the latter Commanding the district of the upper Potomac River he was wounded and captured near Leesburg Virginia on March 8 1862 but was immediately exchanged and returned to duty On April 25 1862 he was promoted to Brigadier General U S Volunteers and the command of a brigade in Maj Gen Nathaniel Banks s corps which he led in the Shenandoah Valley against Thomas J Stonewall Jackson His brigade joined Maj Gen John Pope s Army of Virginia in late June He led it at the Battle of Cedar Mountain on August 9 1862 where he was seriously wounded in the arm and leg He returned to duty on October 15 as the division commander the corps was now part of the Army of the Potomac designated the XII Corps under the command of Maj Gen Henry W Slocum Geary s division was heavily engaged at Chancellorsville where he was knocked unconscious as a cannonball shot past his head on May 3 1863 Some accounts state that he was hit in the chest with a cannonball At the Battle of Gettysburg Slocum s corps arrived after the first day s July 1 1863 fighting subsided and took up a defensive position on Culp s Hill the extreme right of the Union line On the second day heavy fighting on the Union left demanded reinforcements and Geary was ordered to leave a single brigade under Brig Gen George S Greene on Culp s Hill and follow another division which was just departing Geary lost track of the division he was supposed to follow south on the Baltimore Pike and inexplicably marched completely off the battlefield eventually reaching Rock Creek His two brigades finally returned to Culp s Hill by 9 00 pm that night arriving in the midst of a fierce fire fight between a Confederate division and Greene s lone brigade This embarrassing incident might have damaged his reputation except for two factors the part of the battle he was supposed to march to join had ended so he wasn t really needed and because of a dispute between army commander Maj Gen George G Meade and Slocum over the filing of their official reports little public notice ensued The XII Corps was transferred west to join the besieged Union army at Chattanooga Geary s son Edward died in his arms at the Battle of Wauhatchie enraging him sufficiently to prevail in a battle in which his division was greatly outnumbered He distinguished himself in command during the Battle of Lookout Mountain the entire Atlanta Campaign Sherman s March to the Sea and the Carolinas Campaign He oversaw the surrender of Savannah Georgia and briefly served as the city s military governor where he was breveted to major general Governor of Pennsylvania and death edit nbsp Opposition poster for the 1866 election Geary s opponent Hiester Clymer ran on a white supremacy platform After the war Geary served two terms as the Republican governor of Pennsylvania from 1867 to 1873 He established a reputation as a political independent attacking the political influence of the railroads and vetoing many special interest bills On February 8 1873 less than three weeks after leaving the governor s post Geary was fatally stricken with a heart attack while preparing breakfast for his infant son in Harrisburg Pennsylvania He was 53 years old He was buried in Harrisburg with state honors in Mount Kalmia Cemetery now the Harrisburg Cemetery Freemasonry editGeary was made a Mason at Sight on January 4 1847 in Pennsylvania Philanthropy Lodge 255 just before he left with his troops to fight in the Mexican War During the Civil War he was the commanding Union general at the fall of Savannah Georgia He placed Federal troops about the quarters of Solomon s Lodge No 1 to save it from looting and damage Later while Geary was governor of Pennsylvania the Lodge sent him a resolution of thanks He answered by claiming it was the principles and tenets of Freemasonry that helped Reconstruction to be as successful as it finally turned out to be In this reply he said I feel again justified in referring to our beloved institution by saying that to Freemasonry the people of the country are indebted for many mitigations of the suffering caused by the direful passions of war 10 In memoriam editGeary County Kansas was renamed in honor of John W Geary in 1889 previously named Davis County for Jefferson Davis it was renamed at the insistence of its citizens in 1893 the county electorate rejected an attempt to restore the Davis County name as is Geary Boulevard in San Francisco a major artery in that city Geary Avenue on the field at Gettysburg Geary Street in New Cumberland Pennsylvania where Geary owned a home Geary Street in Harrisburg the capital of Pennsylvania and Geary Hall an undergraduate dorm building in East Halls at Pennsylvania State University There is a monument to Geary in the town center of Mount Pleasant Pennsylvania Geary Kansas in Doniphan County was also named in his honor but the town ceased to exist in 1905 In 1914 a monument to Geary was erected on Culp s Hill at Gettysburg but it was not formally dedicated until August 11 2007 11 See also edit nbsp American Civil War portal nbsp San Francisco Bay Area portal nbsp Biography portalList of American Civil War generals Union Notes edit The Governors of Pennsylvania Mount Union Pennsylvania The Mount Union Times January 27 1911 p 1 subscription required John White Geary Genealogy com Retrieved September 19 2015 Eicher p 251 Tagg p 155 Warner p 169 Daily Alta California Vol 1 no 15 January 11 1850 p 2 Retrieved August 24 2014 Daily Alta California Vol 1 no 51 February 27 1850 p 4 Retrieved August 24 2014 Blackmar I p 270 Gihon p 216 Johnson pp 233 234 Gihon pp 293 299 Freemasonry in the Civil War Archived March 30 2012 at the Wayback Machine Pittsburgh Tribune Review article permanent dead link References editBlackmar Frank W Kansas A Cyclopedia of State History 2 vols Chicago Standard Publishing 1912 OCLC 2996736 Eicher John H and David J Eicher Civil War High Commands Stanford CA Stanford University Press 2001 ISBN 0 8047 3641 3 Geary John W A Politician Goes to War The Civil War Letters of John White Geary Edited by William Alan Blair University Park Pennsylvania State University Press 1995 ISBN 0 271 01338 9 Gihon John H Geary and Kansas Governor Geary s Administration in Kansas with a Complete History of the Territory until July 1857 Philadelphia Charles C Rhodes 1857 OCLC 247108072 Johnson Samuel A The Battle Cry of Freedom The New England Emigrant Aid Company in the Kansas Crusade Lawrence University of Kansas Press 1954 OCLC 192098112 Socolofsky Homer E Kansas Governors Lawrence University Press of Kansas 1990 ISBN 0 7006 0421 9 Tagg Larry The Generals of Gettysburg Campbell CA Savas Publishing 1998 ISBN 1 882810 30 9 Warner Ezra J Generals in Blue Lives of the Union Commanders Baton Rouge Louisiana State University Press 1964 ISBN 0 8071 0822 7 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to John W Geary Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission description of Geary s governorship The John W Geary Letters at the Georgia Historical Society The Geary Family Papers including correspondence and John W Geary s diary are available for research use at the Historical Society of Pennsylvania William G Cutler s History of the State of Kansas John W Geary Find a Grave Retrieved November 1 2008 John White Geary Monument at the Historical Marker Database John White Geary Papers Yale Collection of Western Americana Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library Party political officesPreceded byAndrew Gregg Curtin Republican nominee for Governor of Pennsylvania1866 1869 Succeeded byJohn F HartranftPolitical officesNew office Mayor of San FranciscoMay 1 1850 May 4 1851 Succeeded byCharles James BrenhamPreceded byWilson Shannon Territorial Governor of KansasSeptember 9 1856 March 20 1857 Succeeded byRobert J WalkerPreceded byAndrew Gregg Curtin Governor of PennsylvaniaJanuary 15 1867 January 21 1873 Succeeded byJohn F Hartranft Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John W Geary amp oldid 1180651980, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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