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Theophilus H. Holmes

Theophilus Hunter Holmes (November 13, 1804 – June 21, 1880) was an American soldier who served as a senior officer of the Confederate States Army and commanded infantry in the Eastern and Trans-Mississippi theaters of the American Civil War. He had previously served with distinction as an officer of the United States Army in the Seminole and Mexican–American wars. A friend and protégé of Confederate States President Jefferson Davis, he was appointed commander of the Trans-Mississippi Department, but failed in his key task, which was to defend the Confederacy's hold on the Mississippi.


Theophilus H. Holmes
Holmes in uniform, c. 1862
Birth nameTheophilus Hunter Holmes
Born(1804-11-13)November 13, 1804
Sampson County, North Carolina, U.S.
DiedJune 21, 1880(1880-06-21) (aged 75)
Fayetteville, North Carolina, U.S.
Buried
MacPherson Presbyterian Church,
Fayetteville, North Carolina, U.S.
35°03′38.6″N 78°56′44.1″W / 35.060722°N 78.945583°W / 35.060722; -78.945583
Allegiance
Service/branch
Years of service
  • 1829–1861 (USA)
  • 1861–1865 (CSA)
Rank Major (USA)
Brigadier-General (NC Militia)
Lieutenant-General (CSA)
Commands heldReserve Brigade, Army of the Potomac
District of Fredericksburg
Department of North Carolina
District of Aquia
Trans-Mississippi Department
District of Arkansas
North Carolina Reserve Forces
Battles/wars
RelationsGabriel Holmes (father)
Signature

Early life and education

Theophilus H. Holmes was born in Sampson County, North Carolina, in 1804.[1] His father, Gabriel Holmes, was a former Governor of North Carolina and U.S. Congressman.[2][3] After a failed attempt at plantation managing, Holmes asked his father for an appointment to the United States Military Academy, from which he graduated in 1829. He was ranked 44 out of 46, in his class.[4] Holmes was apparently quite deaf, and was almost never aware of loud gunfire.[1]

United States Army

I, who knew [Holmes] from his school-boy days, who served with him in garrison and in field, and with pride watched him as he gallantly led a storming party up a rocky height at Monterey, and was intimately acquainted with his whole career during our sectional war, bear willing testimony to the purity, self-abnegation, generosity, fidelity and gallantry, which characterized him as a man and a soldier.

Confederate President Jefferson Davis, in his book The Rise and Fall of the Confederate Government[3]

After graduating, Holmes was commissioned a brevet second lieutenant in the 7th U.S. Infantry. In 1838, Holmes attained the rank of captain.[3] During his early services, Holmes served in Florida, the Indian Territory, and Texas. Holmes also served in the Second Seminole War, with distinction.[2] In 1841, he married Laura Whetmore, with whom he would have eight children.[3] During the Mexican–American War, he was brevetted to major for the Battle of Monterrey in September 1846.[2] This promotion was due to Jefferson Davis witnessing his courageous actions there.[3] He received a full promotion to major of the 8th U.S. Infantry in 1855.[4]

Confederate States Army

Early service

Almost immediately after the firing on Fort Sumter, Holmes resigned his commission in the U.S. Army and his command of Fort Columbus, Governors Island in New York City on April 22, 1861, having accepted a commission as a colonel in the Confederate States Army in March.[2] He commanded the coastal defenses of the Department of North Carolina and then served as a brigadier-general in the North Carolina Militia.[5] He was appointed brigadier-general on June 5, 1861, commanding the Department of Fredericksburg.[3] Holmes was assigned to P.G.T. Beauregard, for the First Battle of Manassas.[4] Beauregard sent Holmes orders to attack the Union left, but by the time the orders reached him the Confederacy was already victorious.[4] He was promoted to major general on October 7, 1861. He subsequently commanded the Aquia District [6] before being assigned to the Department of North Carolina.[3]

Peninsula Campaign

During the Peninsula Campaign in the spring of 1862, Holmes was moved to the Richmond area to defend it from the Union assault on the Confederate capital; thus he became temporarily attached to the Army of Northern Virginia.[5] His division consisted of the brigades of Brigadier-Generals Junius Daniel, John G. Walker, Henry A. Wise, and the cavalry brigade of Brig. Gen. J.E.B. Stuart. On June 30, 1862, while the battle of Glendale was fought to the north, Holmes was ordered to cannonade retreating Federals near Malvern Hill. His force was repulsed at Turkey Bridge by artillery fire from Malvern Hill and by the Federal gunboats Galena and Aroostook on the James. During the battle of Malvern Hill on July 1, 1862, his force was in reserve. After the Seven Days Battles, Robert E. Lee expressed displeasure at Holmes's mediocre performance. The two also had fundamental disagreements on strategy and Lee appears to have not been alone in his belief that the nearly 60-year-old Holmes was too old, sluggish, and passive (better as an administrator than a field commander) to wage the aggressive war of movement that Lee planned. In truth, the entire Confederate counterattack in the Seven Days Battles had been handled defectively and many generals were to blame, including Lee himself. Jefferson Davis in particular did not think Holmes was any more at fault than the rest of the Army of Northern Virginia's command structure. Nonetheless, his age and unremarkable record in the war up to this point were factors against him and Lee quickly made it clear that Holmes would not make the cut during the post-Seven Days restructuring of the army. General D.H. Hill, who was known for his sarcastic temperament, also widely spread the story of Holmes saying "I thought I heard firing." at Malvern Hill.

Trans-Mississippi Department

Holmes was then reassigned to commander of the Trans-Mississippi Department. He was promoted to lieutenant-general, on October 10, 1862, by Jefferson Davis, but declined on the grounds that he had not done anything to deserve this promotion. However, Davis urged him and eventually he accepted.[4] During his time as commander of the Trans-Mississippi Department, Holmes failed to perform his most important duty: defend the Confederacy's hold on the Mississippi River. He refused to send troops to relieve Vicksburg, during the Vicksburg Campaign, leading to the Union's victory. Holmes, operating from Arkansas, protested that the troops in that state were nearly useless and there was no realistic possibility of using them to relieve Vicksburg. For the most part, the Confederate forces in this remote area were little more than a disorganized mob of militia scattered across all corners of the state. There were few weapons available and even fewer modern ones. The soldiers for the most part had no shoes, no uniforms, no munitions, no training, organization, or discipline, a situation worsened by the fact that many communities in Arkansas had no government above the village level. People did not pay taxes or have any written laws and strongly resisted any attempt to impose an outside government or military discipline on them. Soldiers in the Arkansas militia did not understand the organization of a proper army or obeying orders from above. Even worse, many of them were in poor physical condition and unable to handle the rigors of a lengthy military campaign. Holmes for his part believed that he could muster an army of about 15,000 men in Arkansas, but there would be almost no competent officers to lead it anyway. Further compounding his difficulties were multiple Union armies converging on the state from all sides. In this situation, Holmes wrote to Richmond that if by some miracle, he could organize the Arkansas militia into an army and get them across the Mississippi River, they would simply desert as soon as they got to the east bank. As one other serious difficulty, the remote Trans-Mississippi region had considerably lower levels of support for the Confederate cause than the states of the east. Seceding from the Union in 1861 had largely been the decision of the state legislature of Arkansas, and was not well received among much of the population. Attempts to enforce conscription into the Confederate army met with resistance and many locals dodged the draft, became guerrillas, or even joined the Union army, resulting in harsh penalties being imposed by state governments against draft dodgers.[7][page needed]

After numerous complaints were sent to Davis, who had little understanding of events in a region almost 900 miles from Richmond, Holmes was relieved as head of the Trans-Mississippi Department in March 1863.[4]

District of Arkansas

After Holmes was relieved as head of the Trans-Mississippi Department, General Kirby Smith appointed him head of the District of Arkansas[4] and in June, ordered Holmes to make a desperation attack to take some pressure off the beleaguered Vicksburg garrison. On July 4, the day Vicksburg fell to Ulysses Grant's army, Holmes attacked the Union garrison at Helena, Arkansas with 8,000 men. He planned a coordinated attack in conjunction with Sterling Price, John S. Marmaduke, James Fleming Fagan, and, Governor of Arkansas, Harris Flanagin. Despite miscommunication, the Confederates had some success. After hours of fighting, a general retreat was called, and the Confederates pulled back to Little Rock, Arkansas.[4] On July 23, Holmes became ill and temporarily relinquished command in Arkansas to Sterling Price.[1] Price evacuated Little Rock on September 10, and two weeks later Holmes resumed command. In a letter sent to Jefferson Davis on January 29, 1864, Kirby Smith reported that Holmes's age was catching up to him and that he was deficient in energy and apparently also suffering memory problems, thus he needed to be replaced by a younger man. The soldiers he commanded in Arkansas had already taken to sarcastically calling him "Granny". Upon learning of this, an insulted Holmes resigned his post on February 28.

Later service and life

In April 1864, Holmes commanded the Reserve Forces of North Carolina. Holmes saw little action after being appointed to this new position. He held this position until the end of the Civil War. Holmes, along with General Joseph E. Johnston, surrendered to William Tecumseh Sherman on April 26, 1865.[8] He returned to North Carolina, where he spent the rest of his life as a farmer. Holmes died in Fayetteville, North Carolina, and is buried there in MacPherson Presbyterian Church Cemetery.[3]

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ a b c Welsh, p. 104.
  2. ^ a b c d Hoig, p. 306.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h McCrady, pp. 608–609.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h Williams, pp. 989–990.
  5. ^ a b Dougherty, pp. 22–23.
  6. ^ Johnston, p. 81.
  7. ^ Hilderman
  8. ^ Eicher pg. 875

Sources

Works cited
  • Dougherty, Kevin, and Michael J. Moore. The Peninsula Campaign of 1862: A Military Analysis. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 2005. ISBN 1-57806-752-9.
  • Eicher, John H., and David J. Eicher, Civil War High Commands. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2001. ISBN 978-0-8047-3641-1.
  • Hilderman, Walter C. III Theophilus Hunter Holmes: A North Carolina General in the Civil War. McFarland & Company Inc., 2013. ISBN 978-0-7864-7310-6.
  • Hoig, Stan. Beyond the Frontier: Exploring the Indian Country. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1998. ISBN 0-8061-3052-0.
  • Johnston, Joseph E. Narrative of Military Operations. New York: D. Appleton and Company, 1874.
  • McCrady, Edward, and Samuel A'Court Ashe. Cyclopedia of Eminent and Representative Men of the Carolinas of the Nineteenth Century. Vol. 2. Madison, WS: Brant & Fuller, 1892. OCLC 33265268.
  • Welsh, Jack D. Medical Histories of Confederate Generals. Kent, OH: Kent State University Press, 1999. ISBN 978-0-87338-853-5.
  • Williams, Clay. "Theophilus Hunter Holmes." In Encyclopedia of the American Civil War: A Political, Social, and Military History, edited by David S. Heidler and Jeanne T. Heidler. New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 2000. ISBN 0-393-04758-X.

Further reading

  • Walther, Eric H. William Lowndes Yancey and the Coming of the Civil War. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, ISBN 0-8078-3027-5.
  • Warner, Ezra J. Generals in Gray: Lives of the Confederate Commanders. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1959. ISBN 978-0-8071-0823-9.

External links

theophilus, holmes, theophilus, hunter, holmes, november, 1804, june, 1880, american, soldier, served, senior, officer, confederate, states, army, commanded, infantry, eastern, trans, mississippi, theaters, american, civil, previously, served, with, distinctio. Theophilus Hunter Holmes November 13 1804 June 21 1880 was an American soldier who served as a senior officer of the Confederate States Army and commanded infantry in the Eastern and Trans Mississippi theaters of the American Civil War He had previously served with distinction as an officer of the United States Army in the Seminole and Mexican American wars A friend and protege of Confederate States President Jefferson Davis he was appointed commander of the Trans Mississippi Department but failed in his key task which was to defend the Confederacy s hold on the Mississippi Lieutenant GeneralTheophilus H HolmesHolmes in uniform c 1862Birth nameTheophilus Hunter HolmesBorn 1804 11 13 November 13 1804Sampson County North Carolina U S DiedJune 21 1880 1880 06 21 aged 75 Fayetteville North Carolina U S BuriedMacPherson Presbyterian Church Fayetteville North Carolina U S 35 03 38 6 N 78 56 44 1 W 35 060722 N 78 945583 W 35 060722 78 945583Allegiance United States Confederate StatesService wbr branchUnited States Army Confederate States ArmyYears of service1829 1861 USA 1861 1865 CSA RankMajor USA Brigadier General NC Militia Lieutenant General CSA Commands heldReserve Brigade Army of the Potomac District of FredericksburgDepartment of North CarolinaDistrict of AquiaTrans Mississippi DepartmentDistrict of ArkansasNorth Carolina Reserve ForcesBattles warsAmerican Indian Wars Seminole Wars Mexican American War Battle of Monterrey American Civil War Seven Days Battles Battle of HelenaRelationsGabriel Holmes father Signature Contents 1 Early life and education 2 United States Army 3 Confederate States Army 3 1 Early service 3 2 Peninsula Campaign 3 3 Trans Mississippi Department 3 4 District of Arkansas 3 5 Later service and life 4 See also 5 References 5 1 Citations 5 2 Sources 6 Further reading 7 External linksEarly life and education EditTheophilus H Holmes was born in Sampson County North Carolina in 1804 1 His father Gabriel Holmes was a former Governor of North Carolina and U S Congressman 2 3 After a failed attempt at plantation managing Holmes asked his father for an appointment to the United States Military Academy from which he graduated in 1829 He was ranked 44 out of 46 in his class 4 Holmes was apparently quite deaf and was almost never aware of loud gunfire 1 United States Army EditI who knew Holmes from his school boy days who served with him in garrison and in field and with pride watched him as he gallantly led a storming party up a rocky height at Monterey and was intimately acquainted with his whole career during our sectional war bear willing testimony to the purity self abnegation generosity fidelity and gallantry which characterized him as a man and a soldier Confederate President Jefferson Davis in his book The Rise and Fall of the Confederate Government 3 After graduating Holmes was commissioned a brevet second lieutenant in the 7th U S Infantry In 1838 Holmes attained the rank of captain 3 During his early services Holmes served in Florida the Indian Territory and Texas Holmes also served in the Second Seminole War with distinction 2 In 1841 he married Laura Whetmore with whom he would have eight children 3 During the Mexican American War he was brevetted to major for the Battle of Monterrey in September 1846 2 This promotion was due to Jefferson Davis witnessing his courageous actions there 3 He received a full promotion to major of the 8th U S Infantry in 1855 4 Confederate States Army EditEarly service Edit Almost immediately after the firing on Fort Sumter Holmes resigned his commission in the U S Army and his command of Fort Columbus Governors Island in New York City on April 22 1861 having accepted a commission as a colonel in the Confederate States Army in March 2 He commanded the coastal defenses of the Department of North Carolina and then served as a brigadier general in the North Carolina Militia 5 He was appointed brigadier general on June 5 1861 commanding the Department of Fredericksburg 3 Holmes was assigned to P G T Beauregard for the First Battle of Manassas 4 Beauregard sent Holmes orders to attack the Union left but by the time the orders reached him the Confederacy was already victorious 4 He was promoted to major general on October 7 1861 He subsequently commanded the Aquia District 6 before being assigned to the Department of North Carolina 3 Peninsula Campaign Edit During the Peninsula Campaign in the spring of 1862 Holmes was moved to the Richmond area to defend it from the Union assault on the Confederate capital thus he became temporarily attached to the Army of Northern Virginia 5 His division consisted of the brigades of Brigadier Generals Junius Daniel John G Walker Henry A Wise and the cavalry brigade of Brig Gen J E B Stuart On June 30 1862 while the battle of Glendale was fought to the north Holmes was ordered to cannonade retreating Federals near Malvern Hill His force was repulsed at Turkey Bridge by artillery fire from Malvern Hill and by the Federal gunboats Galena and Aroostook on the James During the battle of Malvern Hill on July 1 1862 his force was in reserve After the Seven Days Battles Robert E Lee expressed displeasure at Holmes s mediocre performance The two also had fundamental disagreements on strategy and Lee appears to have not been alone in his belief that the nearly 60 year old Holmes was too old sluggish and passive better as an administrator than a field commander to wage the aggressive war of movement that Lee planned In truth the entire Confederate counterattack in the Seven Days Battles had been handled defectively and many generals were to blame including Lee himself Jefferson Davis in particular did not think Holmes was any more at fault than the rest of the Army of Northern Virginia s command structure Nonetheless his age and unremarkable record in the war up to this point were factors against him and Lee quickly made it clear that Holmes would not make the cut during the post Seven Days restructuring of the army General D H Hill who was known for his sarcastic temperament also widely spread the story of Holmes saying I thought I heard firing at Malvern Hill Trans Mississippi Department Edit Holmes was then reassigned to commander of the Trans Mississippi Department He was promoted to lieutenant general on October 10 1862 by Jefferson Davis but declined on the grounds that he had not done anything to deserve this promotion However Davis urged him and eventually he accepted 4 During his time as commander of the Trans Mississippi Department Holmes failed to perform his most important duty defend the Confederacy s hold on the Mississippi River He refused to send troops to relieve Vicksburg during the Vicksburg Campaign leading to the Union s victory Holmes operating from Arkansas protested that the troops in that state were nearly useless and there was no realistic possibility of using them to relieve Vicksburg For the most part the Confederate forces in this remote area were little more than a disorganized mob of militia scattered across all corners of the state There were few weapons available and even fewer modern ones The soldiers for the most part had no shoes no uniforms no munitions no training organization or discipline a situation worsened by the fact that many communities in Arkansas had no government above the village level People did not pay taxes or have any written laws and strongly resisted any attempt to impose an outside government or military discipline on them Soldiers in the Arkansas militia did not understand the organization of a proper army or obeying orders from above Even worse many of them were in poor physical condition and unable to handle the rigors of a lengthy military campaign Holmes for his part believed that he could muster an army of about 15 000 men in Arkansas but there would be almost no competent officers to lead it anyway Further compounding his difficulties were multiple Union armies converging on the state from all sides In this situation Holmes wrote to Richmond that if by some miracle he could organize the Arkansas militia into an army and get them across the Mississippi River they would simply desert as soon as they got to the east bank As one other serious difficulty the remote Trans Mississippi region had considerably lower levels of support for the Confederate cause than the states of the east Seceding from the Union in 1861 had largely been the decision of the state legislature of Arkansas and was not well received among much of the population Attempts to enforce conscription into the Confederate army met with resistance and many locals dodged the draft became guerrillas or even joined the Union army resulting in harsh penalties being imposed by state governments against draft dodgers 7 page needed After numerous complaints were sent to Davis who had little understanding of events in a region almost 900 miles from Richmond Holmes was relieved as head of the Trans Mississippi Department in March 1863 4 District of Arkansas Edit After Holmes was relieved as head of the Trans Mississippi Department General Kirby Smith appointed him head of the District of Arkansas 4 and in June ordered Holmes to make a desperation attack to take some pressure off the beleaguered Vicksburg garrison On July 4 the day Vicksburg fell to Ulysses Grant s army Holmes attacked the Union garrison at Helena Arkansas with 8 000 men He planned a coordinated attack in conjunction with Sterling Price John S Marmaduke James Fleming Fagan and Governor of Arkansas Harris Flanagin Despite miscommunication the Confederates had some success After hours of fighting a general retreat was called and the Confederates pulled back to Little Rock Arkansas 4 On July 23 Holmes became ill and temporarily relinquished command in Arkansas to Sterling Price 1 Price evacuated Little Rock on September 10 and two weeks later Holmes resumed command In a letter sent to Jefferson Davis on January 29 1864 Kirby Smith reported that Holmes s age was catching up to him and that he was deficient in energy and apparently also suffering memory problems thus he needed to be replaced by a younger man The soldiers he commanded in Arkansas had already taken to sarcastically calling him Granny Upon learning of this an insulted Holmes resigned his post on February 28 Later service and life Edit In April 1864 Holmes commanded the Reserve Forces of North Carolina Holmes saw little action after being appointed to this new position He held this position until the end of the Civil War Holmes along with General Joseph E Johnston surrendered to William Tecumseh Sherman on April 26 1865 8 He returned to North Carolina where he spent the rest of his life as a farmer Holmes died in Fayetteville North Carolina and is buried there in MacPherson Presbyterian Church Cemetery 3 See also EditList of American Civil War generals Confederate References EditCitations Edit a b c Welsh p 104 a b c d Hoig p 306 a b c d e f g h McCrady pp 608 609 a b c d e f g h Williams pp 989 990 a b Dougherty pp 22 23 Johnston p 81 Hilderman Eicher pg 875 Sources Edit Works citedDougherty Kevin and Michael J Moore The Peninsula Campaign of 1862 A Military Analysis Jackson University Press of Mississippi 2005 ISBN 1 57806 752 9 Eicher John H and David J Eicher Civil War High Commands Stanford Stanford University Press 2001 ISBN 978 0 8047 3641 1 Hilderman Walter C III Theophilus Hunter Holmes A North Carolina General in the Civil War McFarland amp Company Inc 2013 ISBN 978 0 7864 7310 6 Hoig Stan Beyond the Frontier Exploring the Indian Country Norman University of Oklahoma Press 1998 ISBN 0 8061 3052 0 Johnston Joseph E Narrative of Military Operations New York D Appleton and Company 1874 McCrady Edward and Samuel A Court Ashe Cyclopedia of Eminent and Representative Men of the Carolinas of the Nineteenth Century Vol 2 Madison WS Brant amp Fuller 1892 OCLC 33265268 Welsh Jack D Medical Histories of Confederate Generals Kent OH Kent State University Press 1999 ISBN 978 0 87338 853 5 Williams Clay Theophilus Hunter Holmes In Encyclopedia of the American Civil War A Political Social and Military History edited by David S Heidler and Jeanne T Heidler New York W W Norton amp Company 2000 ISBN 0 393 04758 X Further reading EditWalther Eric H William Lowndes Yancey and the Coming of the Civil War Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press ISBN 0 8078 3027 5 Warner Ezra J Generals in Gray Lives of the Confederate Commanders Baton Rouge Louisiana State University Press 1959 ISBN 978 0 8071 0823 9 External links EditTheophilus H Holmes at Find a GravePortals American Civil War Biography United States Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Theophilus H Holmes amp oldid 1130062176, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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