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William W. Belknap

William Worth Belknap (September 22, 1829 – October 12, 1890) was a lawyer, Union Army officer, government administrator in Iowa, and the 30th United States Secretary of War, serving under President Ulysses S. Grant. Belknap was impeached on March 2, 1876, for his role in the trader post scandal, but was acquitted by the Senate. Belknap was the first cabinet secretary in U.S. history to be impeached.

William Belknap
30th United States Secretary of War
In office
October 25, 1869 – March 2, 1876
PresidentUlysses S. Grant
Preceded byWilliam Tecumseh Sherman (acting)
Succeeded byAlphonso Taft
Member of the Iowa House of Representatives
from the 54th district
In office
January 11, 1858 – January 8, 1860
Serving with Cyrenus C. Bauder and
John Allen Casey
Preceded byDistrict Established
Succeeded byGeorge William Reddick
Personal details
Born
William Worth Belknap

(1829-09-22)September 22, 1829
Newburgh, New York, U.S.
DiedOctober 12, 1890(1890-10-12) (aged 61)
Washington, D.C., U.S.
Political party
Spouses
Cora LeRoy
(m. 1854; died 1862)
Carrie Tomlinson
(m. 1869; died 1870)
Amanda Tomlinson Bower
(m. 1873)
EducationCollege of New Jersey (BA)
Georgetown University
Military service
AllegianceUnited States
Branch/serviceU.S. Army (Union Army)
Years of service
Rank
UnitIowa Home Guard
15th Iowa Infantry Regiment
XVII Corps
Commands
  • Keokuk City Rifles (1861)
  • 15th Iowa Infantry (1861–1864)
  • 4th Regiment, XVII Corps (1864–1865)
Battles/wars

A native of New York, Belknap graduated from the College of New Jersey, now Princeton University, in 1848, studied law with a Georgetown attorney, and passed the bar in 1851. He moved to Iowa, where he practiced law in partnership with Ralph P. Lowe. Belknap entered politics as a Democrat and served one term in the Iowa House of Representatives. When the American Civil War broke out in 1861, Belknap joined the Union Army. A tall burly man, Belknap was a natural Union Army leader and recruiter. A veteran of the Iowa Home Guard who had attained the rank of captain, he was commissioned as a major in the 15th Iowa Volunteer Infantry. He took part in numerous engagements, including Shiloh, where he was wounded, and Corinth. He served as a regimental, brigade, division, and corps commander, and served in high-level staff positions. By the end of the war, Belknap had been promoted to brigadier general and received a brevet promotion to major general of volunteers.

After declining a regular Army commission, Belknap was appointed Iowa's Collector of Internal Revenue by President Andrew Johnson; he served with distinction for four years. In 1869, President Ulysses S. Grant appointed Belknap as Secretary of War. During his tenure, Belknap ordered portraits of all the previous Secretaries, intending to create a complete collection in honor of the United States Centennial. In 1871, Belknap was investigated by Congress, after he was directly involved in the sale of arms and munitions to France, while the United States was ostensibly neutral during the Franco-Prussian War. The same year, Belknap had arranged aid for victims of the catastrophic Chicago Fire.

During the Reconstruction Era, Belknap's War Department and the U.S. military worked under the supervision of President Ulysses S. Grant and the United States Attorney General's office to occupy the former Confederacy and attempt to implement changes in government and the economy, while protecting freedmen from an increasingly violent insurgency. Belknap supported Grant's Reconstruction policy, which most Democrats opposed.

In 1875, Grant, Belknap, and other members of Grant's administration secretly agreed to remove troops from the Black Hills after gold was discovered. The US had protected the area from white settlers as part of a US treaty with the Lakota. The withdrawal of troops allowed a gold rush of white settlers to take place, and the US took de facto possession after the Lakota refused to sell their sacred lands. In 1876, the trader post scandal at Fort Sill led to Belknap's sudden resignation, impeachment by the Democratic-controlled House, and trial by the Senate. While a majority of senators voted to convict, they lacked the two-thirds required, and Belknap was acquitted. Belknap's Washington D. C. federal trial was dismissed by Judge Arthur MacArthur Sr. After the trial, Belknap resumed practicing law in Washington; he continued to be popular among Iowa Civil War veterans and was active until he died of a heart attack in 1890. One historian described Belknap as a man of both virtues and flaws, a talented lawyer, administrator, and military officer, but whose personal corruption overshadowed his positive qualities. Belknap's heroic Union Civil War service has been largely forgotten by historians.

Early life and career edit

 

William Worth Belknap was born in Newburgh, New York on September 22, 1829, the son of career soldier William G. Belknap and Anne Clark Belknap.[1] Belknap's father had fought with distinction in the War of 1812, Florida War, and Mexican–American War.[2][3] Belknap attended the local schools in Newburgh, and graduated from the College of New Jersey at Princeton in 1848.[2] In addition to attending Princeton with Hiester Clymer, the Democratic Congressman who later led the investigation into Belknap's War Department corruption, Belknap was a college contemporary of Grant's Secretary of Navy George M. Robeson, who was one year behind Clymer and Belknap at Princeton.[4] After graduation, he studied law with Georgetown attorney Hugh E. Caperton. After passing an examination by Judge William Cranch in 1851, Belknap was admitted to the Washington, D.C. bar, and began looking for a place to settle and begin his career.

He moved west to Keokuk, Iowa, and entered into a partnership with Ralph P. Lowe.[2] Deciding to make Iowa his permanent residence, in 1854, Belknap had a home built in Keokuk. He joined the Democratic Party and successfully ran for state office in 1856, serving in the Iowa House of Representatives from the District 54 between 1858 and 1860.[7] Belknap was looked on as a rising Iowa Democratic leader.[8] Belknap also joined a local company of the Iowa Home Guard, the Keokuk City Rifles, and he attained the rank of captain.[9]

Marriages and family edit

In 1854 Belknap married Cora LeRoy, who died in 1862. They had one child together, Hugh R. Belknap, who served as a U.S. representative from Illinois.[10] Belknap married Carita S. Tomlinson of Kentucky in January 1869;[10] she died of tuberculosis shortly after childbirth in December 1870.[10]

Belknap married again on December 11, 1873, to Amanda (née Tomlinson) Bower, his second wife's widowed sister.[10] They had a daughter together, Alice Belknap, born November 28, 1874.[11][12] Alice Belknap was considered one of Washington society's most sought after belles.[13] In 1897 she reportedly converted to Judaism for her engagement to Paul May, an attaché of the Belgian legation in Washington.[14][15] The engagement was broken the following year, and in June 1898 Alice Belknap married William Barklie Henry of Philadelphia.[16]

American Civil War edit

 
Major General Belknap

When the American Civil War started, Belknap remained loyal to the Union as a pro-war Democrat.[17] He first saw action in the Battle of Athens as the captain of the Keokuk City Rifles,[18] a company of the Iowa Home Guard. He enlisted in the Union Army as a volunteer on November 7, 1861, and was commissioned as a major. On December 7 he was mustered[19] and tasked with raising and equipping the 15th Iowa Volunteer Infantry.[2] Belknap was assigned to Companies F&S.[20] A rugged, charismatic and handsome man, Belknap was well-suited to the rigors of being a soldier. At over six feet tall and 200 pounds, with blue eyes, and fair hair, mustache, and beard, Belknap was a natural leader described as "a fine type of Saxon-American manhood".[4] In addition, the public speaking skills and powers of persuasion he had developed as a lawyer made him an effective recruiter.[21] Belknap was a natural soldier, whose leadership skills, loud voice, and militia experience were assets in the training of newly enlisted privates.[22]

Shiloh, Corinth, and Vicksburg edit

 

In March 1862, Maj. Belknap and the 15th Iowa Volunteer Infantry were mustered into military action.[22] Traveling by steamer from St. Louis, Belknap was sent to the front at the Battle of Shiloh; arriving at Pittsburgh Landing on April 6 joining the Army of the Tennessee, under the authority of Union General Ulysses S. Grant.[22] Belknap and his men were ordered to the front to serve under Maj. Gen Benjamin M. Prentiss at the Hornet's Nest.[22] Belknap and his raw 15th Iowa Volunteer Infantry troops were forced to fight like regular army veterans on Prentiss's depleted line.[22] Belknap was slightly wounded in the shoulder,[19] and his horse was shot and killed from under him. Afterwards he continued on the field on foot.[23][22] Reinforced, the Union Army under General Grant, forced the Confederates to retreat back to Corinth, and Shiloh was considered a Union victory.[24]

 
Charge of the Federals
Battle of Corinth (1862)

After Shiloh, Belknap served as acting commander of the 15th Iowa Volunteer Infantry at the Battle of Corinth.[22] Col. Hugh T. Reid, commander of the 15th Iowa Volunteer Infantry, had been severely injured in the neck at Shiloh and removed from active duty.[25] Col. Reid stated that at Shiloh Belknap, "was always in the right place at the right time, directing and encouraging officers and men as coolly as a veteran"[1] At Corinth, Belknap was noted for his "conspicuous gallantry".[1] After Corinth, Belknap and the 15th Iowa Volunteer Infantry for a time served on guard duty.[22][25] Belknap was formally promoted from major to lieutenant colonel on August 20, 1862. Belknap was promoted from lieutenant colonel to colonel of the Iowa 15th Volunteer Infantry on June 3, 1863.[22]

 
Siege of Vicksburg

The Union capture of Vicksburg, the last Confederate stronghold on the Mississippi, was vital and would split the Confederacy in two.[26] Belknap's primary military operation took place at the Siege of Vicksburg until Confederate General John C. Pemberton surrendered to Union General Grant on July 4, 1863.[2][22] Colonel Belknap, Fifteenth Iowa, was part of the Third Brigade of the Sixth Division serving under Major General John McArthur.[27]

On December 24, 1863, Belknap was in command of the 11th Iowa Volunteer Infantry and the 15th Iowa Volunteer Infantry reinforcing Redbone, Mississippi, south of Vicksburg.[25] On February 26, 1864, Belknap served as provost marshal of post in Canton, Mississippi.[25]

Battle of Atlanta, Battle of Ezra Church, and March to the Sea edit

 

On June 8, 1864, Col. Belknap and the veteran 15th Iowa Volunteer Infantry were transferred to the 4th Division, XVII Corps at Ackworth, Georgia.[22] On July 22, 1864, at the Battle of Atlanta, Belknap served with distinction, fighting against the 45th Alabama Infantry.[2][28] Belknap and his Iowa troops dug in and set up earthworks and a parapet around Bald Hill.[28] The 45th Alabama infantry led by Confederate Col. Harris D. Lampley, assaulted the entrenched Union line two times but were repelled by massive Union gun power.[28] On the second attempt, Lampley and his remaining men crossed over to the Union line for hand-to-hand combat. Lampley, who had been shot, cursed his men who had fallen or were retreating.[28] In the midst of the fierce fighting the burly Belknap grabbed the wounded Lampley by the collar, spun him around to face the Confederate lines, and shouted, "Look at your men! They are dead! What are you cursing them for!?"[29] Belknap took the wounded Lampley prisoner; he was held until his death on August 24.[28]

William H. Chamberlain of the 81st Ohio Infantry Regiment later wrote: "The next day [July 23, 1864] I remember seeing Colonel Wm. W. Belknap of the 15th Iowa (afterward Brigadier-General and Secretary of War). He was a brawny, red-bearded giant in appearance, and it was told of him that he had captured a number of prisoners by pulling them over the breastworks by main force, so closely were the lines engaged."[30]

On July 28, 1864, at the Battle of Ezra Church, Belknap was in charge of the 15th Iowa Volunteer Infantry and the 32nd Ohio Volunteer Infantry, which reinforced Maj. Gen. Morgan Lewis Smith's XV Corps.[25][31] On July 30, Belknap was promoted to brigadier general as commander of the 4th Division, XVII Corps, and participated in Major Gen. Sherman's operations in Georgia and the Carolinas.[2][25] After Atlanta was taken by the Union Army, Belknap accompanied Maj. Gen. Sherman on his March to the Sea.[2] Belknap was promoted to Brevet Major General of Volunteers on March 13, 1865,[19] as a reward for his bravery in the Atlanta Campaign.[2] Having declined a regular Army commission, on August 24, 1865, Belknap was mustered out of the U.S. Army.[2]

Iowa Collector of Internal Revenue (1865–1869) edit

In 1865, President Andrew Johnson appointed Belknap Collector of Internal Revenue for Iowa's 1st District.[32] In this position, Belknap was responsible for collecting millions of dollars in federal taxes; collectors were paid a percentage of the revenue they brought in, which made the position lucrative and highly sought after.[33] Belknap served for four years until he was appointed Secretary of War by President Ulysses S. Grant in 1869.[10] During his term as Collector, which coincided with the Reconstruction Era, Belknap associated himself with the Republican Party.[32] Belknap served with distinction; when his Collector's accounts were settled, they were accurate to within four cents.[32]

Secretary of War (1869–1876) edit

 
William W. Belknap
30th U.S. Secretary of War
Huntington 1874

On the advice of General of the Army William T. Sherman, President Ulysses S. Grant appointed Belknap to Secretary of War on October 25, 1869, to take the place of Secretary John A. Rawlins, who had died in office of tuberculosis.[34][35] Sherman himself had served briefly as acting secretary of war, after Rawlins's death.[35] Belknap was seen as a protégé of Sherman's, having fought in the Atlanta Campaign and accompanied him on Sherman's March to the Sea.[34] President Grant believed Belknap had served capably during the American Civil War and deserved to head the War Department.[34]

After his appointment, Belknap implemented or recommended several positive initiatives. He recommended that Congress act to fix the date of May 1 as the start of the fiscal year, allowing for more accurate accounting of department funds. He inaugurated the preparation of historical reports by post commanders as a way to document their activities for posterity, and proposed actions to preserve Yellowstone National Park.[36] Not all of Belknap's actions were well received, however. He bypassed Sherman when making appointments, and reduced Sherman's budget, thus weakening the authority of the General of the Army position.

In 1874, Sherman responded by leaving Washington and moving his headquarters to St. Louis.[37] Major General Oliver O. Howard was also ostracized by Belknap. While stationed in Oregon, in 1874, Major General Howard candidly expressed his opinion of Belknap. Howard stated that Belknap was deceptive to "General Grant", that Belknap was not a true Republican, and that he associated nightly with "foul-mouthed" Democratic Kentucky associates. Howard also opined that Belknap was "not in favor" of the President's Indian Peace policy.[38] That statement is likely related to a conflict, during Belknap's tenure, between the War and Interior Departments as to which would exercise control over American Indian policy.[37] In the context of this era, Belknap's actions may not be seen as overly aggressive or overreaching. In terms of Reconstruction, historian Jean Edward Smith, notes that Grant, a former General of the Army, personally supervised the use of the U.S. military and that Belknap "had less freedom of action than other cabinet members."[39] Belknap held office for 6 years, 4 months, and 7 days.[40]

War Department portrait gallery (1869) edit

Upon assuming office in 1869, Belknap conceived the idea of creating portraits of previous civilian heads of the War Department in honor of the upcoming 1876 U.S. Centennial,[41] and hired renowned artists Daniel Huntington, Robert Weir, and Henry Ulke.[41] Belknap's portrait was painted by Huntington in 1874.[41] The portraits were assembled into a distinct collection to be viewed by the public.[41] The portrait initiative was continued by Belknap's successors;[41] in addition to secretaries, the collection came to include others notable for their military distinction.[41] This effort at historic preservation was considered a success, and Belknap received "unqualified credit" for his creation of the War Department portrait gallery.[41]

Indian ring (1870–1876) edit

 
Fort Sill
Oklahoma Indian Territory

During the summer of 1870, Belknap successfully lobbied Congress to grant him the sole power to appoint and license agents, known as sutlers, with ownership rights to highly lucrative "traderships" at U.S. military forts in the Western frontier.[33][42] These monopoly traderships were considered good investments during the Gilded Age and were highly sought after.[43][44] On July 15, the Commanding General of the Army's power to appoint traderships was repealed, empowering Belknap while further eroding Sherman's authority.[42]

To ensure maximum profits, Belknap ordered soldiers stationed at forts having Belknap-approved sutlers to buy supplies only through the authorized traderships.[33] Soldiers on the Western frontier, who were thus forced to buy goods at exorbitant prices that far exceeded the usual rate, were left in debt or destitute as a result.[45] One 7th Cavalry Sergeant noted that a shot of whiskey "mostly glass" cost 25 cents (.25¢ 1871 = $5.40 2019) glass, at a time when soldiers were paid a few dollars ($1.00 1871 = $21.60 2019) a month.[46]

Hostile American Indians bought supplies at these traderships, including high-quality single-shot breech-loaders and repeating rifles.[47] At the same time, Army requisitions for rifles were filled by Belknap's War Department with inferior single-shot breech-loaders that jammed frequently, and were no match for superior breech-loaders and repeating rifles.[47] The policy had a negative effect on the firepower of the U.S. troops and may have contributed to the defeat of George Armstrong Custer and the 7th Cavalry at Battle of the Little Big Horn in June 1876, several months after Belknap was out of office.[47] (However, Custer had also decided against bringing Gatling guns; these would have increased Custer's firepower, even if his troops had been armed with inferior rifles.)[48]

Belknap's second wife, Carita, was socially ambitious and unwilling to live in Washington, D.C., on Belknap's $8,000 annual salary (about $157,000 in 2018).[44] When the couple arrived in Washington from Keokuk, Iowa in 1869, Belknap rented a large house recently vacated by Secretary of State William H. Seward.[49] In hosting large parties, a typical social requirement for cabinet members, the Belknaps overextended their invitations; one of their events had 1,200 guests, including many young army officers; the resulting raucous behavior led to extensive damage and vandalism, including destruction of curtains, couches, and other furniture.[49] The Belknaps could not afford to pay for the damages, and were faced with leaving Washington society and reducing expenses by living in a boarding house, or finding a way to increase their income.[49]

They decided to look for additional income, and Carita engineered a plan to obtain a lucrative "cash cow" Indian tradership position at the recently built Fort Sill, located in the Oklahoma Indian Territory.[44][49] Carita lobbied her husband to appoint a New York contractor, Caleb P. Marsh, to the Fort Sill tradership; John S. Evans, an experienced sutler, had already been appointed and did not want to give it up.[50][44] To settle the question, Marsh drew up an illicit partnership contract that allowed Evans to keep the tradership at Fort Sill, provided that he pay Marsh $12,000 per year in quarterly installments (approximately $236,000 in 2018).[51] Marsh, in turn, was required to give half of his $12,000 to Carita, also in quarterly installments.[51] All the parties agreed to the arrangement; however, Carita received only one payment before her death from tuberculosis after childbirth in December 1870.[51]

After Carita's death, Marsh continued to pay the quarterly share of the profits to Carita's younger sister Amanda, known as "Puss",[52] who had moved in with the Belknaps, ostensibly to hold as a trust fund for the benefit of Carita's child.[50][51] This profiteering arrangement between Amanda and Marsh was all done with Belknap's full knowledge and consent.[51] After Carita's child died in June 1871, Amanda left to tour Europe, and Belknap continued to take the quarterly bribery payments until December 1873, when Amanda returned and became Belknap's third wife.[50] Amanda was a beautiful young socialite; intending to keep the modest fortune she inherited from her family while also attaining a high position in Washington society, she required Belknap to sign a prenuptial agreement.[53]

Belknap rented a large new house on G Street, which had been built by Orville Babcock, President Grant's personal secretary.[4] From that time onward, Belknap and Amanda continued to accept Marsh's quarterly payments.[50][51] Amanda was considered to be more self-indulgent than her sister Carita, donning gorgeous gowns, jewelry and other accessories for parties and other events, and called the "spendthrift belle" by Washington society.[51][54] The Belknaps' extravagant lifestyle entertaining Washington society, holding lavish parties, and wearing elegant clothes, created envy among both Democratic political figures and permanent residents of Washington.[3][52][53][54] However, that the Belknaps were receiving kickbacks was not publicly known until February 1876, when the Democratic-controlled House of Representatives launched an investigation,[50][52] which discovered that Belknap and his wives had received about $20,000 (approximately $394,000 in 2018) in bribes from Marsh.[54]

French arms sales (1870) edit

During the Franco-Prussian War from 1870 to 1871, the United States declared neutrality.[55] Belknap had been accused by Grant administration critics, including Senators Charles Sumner and Carl Schurz, of violating neutrality and selling arms to French agents.[55] In fact, Belknap had sold obsolete U.S. War Department firearms to a neighbor of the Remington family, which owned the E. Remington and Sons firearms and ammunition company.[55] Samuel Remington, as an arms-selling agent to the French Government, then arranged the sale of those firearms to France.[55][56] Belknap subsequently sold 54,000,000 cartridges to the French Army – cartridges that would specifically fit the firearms he had previously sold to the Remington neighbor.[55] A Congressional investigation that took place in 1872 exonerated Belknap.[55]

Pardoned Cadet Smith (1871) edit

During the Reconstruction Era, former slave James Webster Smith became the first African American cadet to enroll at West Point.[57] After starting classes in 1870, Smith was immediately and severely hazed by white cadets. One of Belknap's nephews, a cadet at the academy, had been reprimanded (but not otherwise punished) for hazing Smith.[58] In another instance, Smith was arrested and taken to a military court for fighting a white cadet, though Smith said he had merely defended himself. Major General Oliver O. Howard, an advocate for African-American civil rights and in charge of the trial, acquitted Smith and gave him a light punishment for unruly conduct.[59] This outraged the academy's Bureau of Military Justice, who made a formal protest to Belknap on November 20, 1870.[60] In another hazing incident, in January 1871, Smith was arrested for supposedly not holding his head up when marching, again after being severely harassed by white cadets.[60]

With Howard now reassigned to the western United States, the academy's administration determined to force Smith out.[61] This time he was convicted; his case was then appealed to Belknap.[60] Smith had been recommended for expulsion, but Belknap intervened with President Grant, who changed the sentence to setting Smith back academically, which caused him to repeat his Plebe year.[60] Smith continued at West Point until 1874, when Professor Peter S. Michie, a white supremacist, gave Smith a private test, in defiance of traditional West Point practice, and claimed that Smith had failed.[62] Smith was then denied a chance to retest and was forced out of West Point.[62]

Belknap concurred when Major General Thomas H. Ruger, appointed superintendent of West Point in 1871, reduced the hazing of cadets by 1873 and made strong efforts to eradicate the "discreditable" practice.[63] Belknap admired Ruger's performance as West Point Superintendent and stated, "I am pretty satisfied with the success of your management, and private conversations with officers of all grades, & with civilians too, who have been there since your accession..."[64][65] Other African Americans followed Smith's entrance into West Point and Henry O. Flipper became the first to graduate from the academy in 1877.[66] In 1997, President Bill Clinton attempted to acknowledge and right the wrong done to Smith by awarding him a posthumous commission as a second lieutenant.[67]

Aiding Chicago fire victims (1871) edit

 
Belknap aided victims of the devastating 1871 Chicago fire.

From October 8 to October 10, 1871, a devastating fire burned and destroyed much of Chicago, killing hundreds of people and causing $200,000,000 (nearly $4 billion in 2018) in damages. Over 100,000 citizens were left destitute and homeless.[68] Belknap took prompt action on October 9, ordering food sent from St. Louis, tents from Jefferson Barracks, and two companies of troops from Fort Omaha to help keep peace and order.[68] On October 10, Belknap in writing a dispatch to Lt. General Philip Sheridan stated that the fire was "...a national calamity. The sufferers have the sincere sympathy of the nation."[68] Belknap ordered military officers around the nation to send supplies to Chicago "liberally and promptly".[68]

In his Annual Report to President Grant in December 1871, Belknap praised the War Department for the efficiency of operations in aiding the homeless and destitute of the Chicago Fire within hours of notification, while the fire was still in progress.[69] Belknap also praised Sheridan and the several companies of troops under his command for keeping law and order in the ruined city.[69]

Requested prisoner and prison reform (1871) edit

In the summer of 1871, a U.S. Board of military officers visited the Quebec, Canada military prison run by the British Army.[69] The board recommended that British methods be adopted in the U.S. Army, including a system of rewards for good behavior, and difficult physical exercise and taxing military drill and ceremony as punishments, with the goals of returning prisoners to military duty at the end of their sentences and preventing re-offenses.[69] Belknap approved the board's recommendations and requested Congress incorporate the British system into the U.S. military,[69] and also requested that funding for the new program be paid for by having soldiers forfeit their pay during the time of their incarceration.[69]

New Orleans 1872 street riot edit

During Reconstruction Grant enforced civil and voting rights for African Americans in the South, using the army and newly created Justice Department to destroy the Ku Klux Klan in 1871, under the Enforcement Acts. Louisiana during Reconstruction was one of the most politically turbulent, violent, and disputed states. Rival political factions fought for power in the state government, and white insurgents frequently attacked freedmen and their sympathizers, requiring the deployment of federal troops to keep peace.[70]

During January 1872, the War Department was kept on high alert, concerned with the potential for violent confrontation in New Orleans between Gov. Henry Clay Warmoth's faction and that of George W. Carter, former speaker of the Louisiana House.[71] Warmoth supported social equality and voting rights for African Americans, but southern conservatives considered him a corrupt northern carpetbagger.[72] To prevent disorder Major General William H. Emory, Louisville District Commander, in charge of New Orleans, decided that federal troops were needed to prevent violence.[73] Belknap informed General-in-Chief William T. Sherman, supporting Emory's request.[73] On January 5, federal troops were deployed in New Orleans to prevent violence, and were intended to occupy the area until January 11.[74] Sec. Belknap advised President Grant that Emory was the best to make the decision about use of the forces.[74]

On January 9, a street riot broke out after a Gov. Warmoth supporter was assassinated; Gov. Warmoth's state police retaliated by attacking and dispersing Carter's faction at the Gem Saloon. Emory deployed reinforcement troops on January 10 to restore order.[75] On January 12, Grant, wanting to stay out of state politics, told the mayor of New Orleans through the War Department that he would not declare martial law in Louisiana.[75] An angry mob of thousands of Carter's men took to the streets. Emory deployed troops equipped with Gatling guns.[76] Carter's men dispersed, believing that Emory would use U.S. military force to keep the peace.[76]

On January 15, Grant wrote to Belknap that he desired to prevent the "danger of bloodshed" without having to take sides with either faction.[77] On January 16, Att. Gen. George H. Williams told Gov. Warmoth that Grant would take sides only if there was a "clear case of legal right and overruling necessity."[77] On January 22, learning that Gov. Warmoth and Carter had formed rival militias and were preparing for violence, President Grant issued orders through the War Department for Emory to use troops if necessary.[78] When Emory communicated Grant's message to both Gov. Warmoth and Carter, they dispersed their factions and kept peace for 10 months.[78]

Eads Bridge commission (1873) edit

 

In 1873, the construction of the Americas' first steel arched bridge, named after James B. Eads, was nearing completion in St. Louis.[79] Belknap, under influence from the Keokuk Packet steamliner company, was opposed to its completion. He desired that the bridge be torn down, so steamers would not have to lower their smokestacks to sail under it.[79] Belknap created a commission to make recommendations on either destroying the bridge and rebuilding it with a design that allowed steamers to pass or building a canal around the bridge so that they could pass.[79] Eads, who was friends with Grant, visited Washington, D.C., in November 1873 before Belknap submitted the report to Congress, and asked that Grant rescue the bridge from destruction.[80] Belknap argued that according to federal law, the Secretary of War had the authority to prevent obstruction of the Mississippi River.[80]

In response, Grant reminded Belknap that Congress had authorized the construction of the bridge,[80] and that Congress would probably not authorize money to tear it down. He overruled Belknap's decision, and told Belknap in person, "You certainly cannot destroy this structure on your own authority...General, you had better drop this case."[81] Belknap was embarrassed, stood up blushing, bowed to President Grant, and left the meeting.[81] The Eads Bridge was completed in 1874 and is still in active use today.[82]

Preserved Mathew Brady Civil War photos (1874) edit

In 1872, photographer Mathew Brady went bankrupt; his possessions, including photographs and negatives, were sold to satisfy creditors.[83] In 1874, the owner of a warehouse in New York City offered a set of over 2,000 Brady negatives for sale; Belknap authorized their purchase for $2,500.[84] The negatives were not packed or transported with care, and by the time the War Department took possession, about one-third of them were damaged or destroyed.[84]

Brady subsequently complained to Belknap that none of the $2,500 had gone to him or any of his creditors.[84] During the discussion, Brady offered to sell a second set of negatives; Congress appropriated up to $25,000 for the purchase, and after reviewing the materials and obtaining advice from a War Department attorney as to their value, Belknap authorized payment in full.[84]

As a result of Belknap's initiative, the War Department acquired over 6,000 images of the Civil War era, including photos of prominent military and government officials, battlefields, and defensive works.[85] This collection was subsequently combined with other collections of Brady photos which were purchased by the federal government; they were later catalogued, and are maintained by the National Archives and Records Administration and the Library of Congress.[86]

Yellowstone expedition (1875) edit

During the summer of 1875, Belknap decided to explore Yellowstone the nation's first national park, created as the result of a law signed by President Grant on March 2, 1872.[87] Accompanying Belknap were Colonel Randolph B. Marcy, Lieutenant Colonel James W. Forsyth, and Chicago businessman William E. Strong.[87] Leading the expedition was Lieutenant Gustavus C. Doane, who had led the Washburn-Langford-Doane Expedition in 1870, the first extensive federal survey of the Yellowstone territory, that was responsible in part for the formation of the park.[87][88] Doane left Fort Ellis, where he was stationed, and made preparations for Belknap's party's arrival at Mammoth Hot Springs.[89]

On July 26, Belknap's party reached Fort Ellis and proceeded to meet Doane.[89] Led by Doane, Belknap's party attempted to retrace the original 1870 Expedition in addition to hunting for any big game found on the journey.[90] Belknap's party included 24 soldiers and two ambulances.[91] The two-week expedition proved to be troublesome as Doane was unable to find big game to hunt and after briefly viewing the Grand Canyon of Yellowstone, Belknap's party had to wait several hours before Doane finally found the trail.[90][92]

Great Sioux War (1876) edit

In late July 1874, a U.S. Army expedition under Col. George A. Custer discovered gold in the Black Hills.[93] Soon many gold miners were trespassing on land granted to the Indians under the 1868 Treaty of Fort Laramie. In June 1875, President Grant attempted to resolve the problem by offering Indians $100,000 per year to lease their land or $6,000,000 for the Black Hills.[93] The Lakota Sioux under Chief Red Cloud refused since the offer would require the Sioux to be moved to the Indian Territory in Oklahoma.

On November 3, 1875, as the crisis escalated, President Grant held a secret meeting at the White House including Belknap, Secretary of Interior Zachariah Chandler and general Philip Sheridan. Sheridan told Grant that the U.S. Army was undermanned and the territory involved was vast, requiring great numbers of soldiers to enforce the treaty.[94] Grant, Belknap, and Chandler agreed to a plan that would withdraw U.S. troops from the Black Hills, allowing miners to mine on Indian Territory.[93] According to historian Jeffrey Ostler, the purpose of the troop withdrawal was to start an Indian war.[93]

On December 3, 1875, Chandler ordered all Indians to return to their respected reservations, however, militant Indians under Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse refused to return. By January 1876, 4,000 miners illegally occupied Indian land.[93] When hostile Indians refused to leave their hunting grounds by the January 31 deadline, Chandler turned the Indians over to Belknap's War Department stating "the said Indians are hereby turned over to the War Department for such action on the part of the Army as you [Belknap] may deem proper under the circumstances."[95]

On February 8, 1876, Generals Crook and Terry were ordered to start winter military campaigns against hostile Indians and the Great Sioux War commenced.[96] On March 1, 1876, Crook, in freezing weather, marched north from Fort Fetterman near Douglas, Wyoming to attack Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse and their Indian followers on the Powder River.[97] The following day, March 2, Belknap abruptly resigned office over the Fort Sill trader post-scandal. From March 3 to March 7 the War Department was run ad interim under Secretary of Navy George M. Robeson. On March 8, 1876 Alphonso Taft was appointed by Grant Secretary of War. The Great Sioux War ended in April 1877 under President Rutherford B. Hayes.

Corruption, resignation, and House impeachment (1876) edit

 
Democratic Congressman Hiester Clymer investigated Belknap's War Department
 
Congressman Clymer reads to the House a report recommending impeachment and a resolution

On February 29, 1876, rumors that Belknap was receiving profits from traderships reached Representative Hiester Clymer, chairman of the Committee on Expenditures in the Department of War. In response, Clymer launched an investigation into the War Department. Although Clymer and Belknap were friends and had been college roommates, Clymer was a racist against black Americans who strongly opposed Republican Reconstruction. During Belknap's tenure, the Army was used in combination with the Justice Department to prosecute the Ku Klux Klan, a policy opposed by most Democrats. Caleb P. Marsh testified to the Clymer Committee that Belknap had personally taken Fort Sill tradership profit payments as part of the partnership agreement between Marsh and John S. Evans. On February 29, 1876, Belknap and his counsel went before Clymer's committee, but Belknap declined to testify.[98]

On the morning of March 2, Treasury Secretary Benjamin Bristow told President Grant of Belknap's impending impeachment. After Grant finished breakfast, Secretary Belknap and Secretary Chandler arrived at the White House. Belknap was extremely anxious, openly wept, and confessed to Grant. Belknap handed Grant a one-sentence resignation letter. Grant personally wrote a letter accepting Belknap's resignation, which he placed on a White House mantel at 10:20 a.m.[98]

Clymer's committee was informed at 11:00 a.m. of Belknap's resignation.[99] Although Belknap's resignation initially caused commotion among House members, it did not prevent action by the Clymer committee. The chairman of the House Managers cited authority that as a rule, the law does not recognize fractions of a day and the House saw no cause to make an exception in this case.[100]: 43 The committee unanimously passed resolutions to impeach Belknap and drew up five articles of impeachment to be sent to the Senate; thus Belknap had both resigned and would be impeached at "the same time" on March 2, 1876, by a unanimous vote of the House of Representatives.[101] This was the first of two times in US history that a cabinet secretary was ever impeached. The second impeachment happened on Feburary 13, 2024 when the house impeached Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas. [102]

Speaker of the House Michael C. Kerr wrote to the Senate that Belknap resigned "with intent to evade the proceedings of impeachment against him,"[101] although within a few years of the 1797 impeachment of Senator Blount a number of officers including several judges had been threatened with impeachment and resigned to avoid it, after which the proceedings against them were abandoned.[100]: 39

On March 29 and April 4, 1876, George Armstrong Custer testified before the Clymer Committee, which continued to gather evidence for the Senate trial. Custer's testimony was a national media sensation because he accused both Grant's brother and the Secretary of War of corruption. Although Belknap had resigned, he had many political allies in Washington, D.C., including Grant. Custer had previously arrested Grant's son Fred, an Army officer, on the charge of drunkenness. As the result of that incident and his testimony to the Clymer Committee, Custer incurred Grant's displeasure. It took more than a month for Custer to resolve the situation and obtain Grant's permission to return to duty, leading his regiment in the expedition that would culminate with Custer's death at the Battle of the Little Bighorn.

Upon Belknap's sudden resignation in March, Grant had to hastily ask his secretary of navy George M. Robeson to run the War Department ad interim, which lasted a week. Grant then appointed Alphonso Taft Secretary of War; Taft was an attorney and former judge; unfamiliar with military matters, he reluctantly agreed to serve in order to stabilize the War Department, and Grant promised to nominate him later for another, more suitable position. In May, Grant kept his word when he created a vacancy in the attorney general's post by naming the incumbent, Edwards Pierrepont, to serve as Minister to England; he then appointed Taft to serve as attorney general, and J. Donald Cameron to succeed Taft as secretary of war.

Senate trial, house arrest, and Senate acquittal edit

 
Belknap's Senate trial defender Matthew H. Carpenter

Starting on April 5, 1876, Belknap was tried by the Senate with President pro tempore Thomas W. Ferry presiding.[103][104] For several weeks senators argued over whether the Senate had jurisdiction to put Belknap on trial since he had already resigned office in March.[105] Belknap's defense managers argued that the Senate had no jurisdiction;[105] the Senate ruled by a vote of 37–29 that it did.[105][106] Belknap was charged with five articles of impeachment, and the Senate listened to over 40 witnesses.[3] With 40 votes needed for conviction, 25 senators voted no on each of five counts, while the yes votes were 35, 36, 36, 36, and 37, thus acquitting Belknap by failing to reach the required two-thirds majority.[3][105][107] [108] All Senators agreed that Belknap took the money from Marsh, but 23 who voted for acquittal believed the Senate did not have jurisdiction.[105][107] Grant's speedy acceptance of Belknap's resignation undoubtedly saved him from conviction.[107]

After the trial, Belknap's wife and children traveled extensively in Europe.[105] Former senator Matthew H. Carpenter of Wisconsin, who had defended Belknap at the Senate trial, said that Belknap was entirely innocent and that if he outlived Belknap he would clear Belknap's name.[109] Carpenter was reelected to the Senate in 1879, but was in ill health; he died in February 1881 and never produced any new evidence.[109]

On March 4, 1876, one month prior to his Senate impeachment trial, Grant's Attorney General Edwards Pierrepont had Belknap arrested; as a foe of the Tweed Ring in New York, Pierrepont was seen as a lawyer of integrity, and Grant named him as attorney general to promote reform and anti-corruption within Grant's administration.[110] Grant, who as former commanding general put more scrutiny into military matters than presidents usually did, had ordered Pierrepont to launch a criminal investigation into Belknap's War department.[111] Much to Belknap's anger, Pierrepont put an armed guard around his home to ensure he did not attempt to flee.[112] In May 1876, Grant named Pierrepont Minister to Britain, and appointed his Secretary of War Alphonso Taft to be attorney general.[110]

Washington, D.C., indictment (1876–1877) edit

 
Judge MacArthur dismissed Belknap's Washington D.C. case, pressured by Grant and Attorney General Taft.

After Belknap's Senate acquittal on August 1, the guards around his house were removed; he was indicted by a grand jury on the same day, and set for trial in the District of Columbia federal court.[113][112] However, journalists and other observers were of the view that the district courts were unlikely to convict, given the number of Grant administration officials who had been accused of corruption and received little or no punishment.[113]

Belknap remained angry at Pierrepont, and threatened to sue him for false imprisonment.[112] On February 2, 1877, Belknap visited Grant and pleaded for his indictment to be dismissed.[110] The next day Grant asked his cabinet for advice;[110] Secretary of State Hamilton Fish was furious at Belknap and wanted him to be tried.[110] Grant decided otherwise, and wrote to Taft that the district attorney should be directed to dismiss the case.[110]

Following Grant's instructions, Taft told Washington, D.C. District Attorney Henry H. Wells that the evidence against Belknap would not sustain a conviction, and that Belknap had suffered enough during the Senate trial.[110][114] Wells moved for dismissal; on February 8, 1877, Belknap's case, indictment No. 11,262, was dismissed by Justice Arthur MacArthur Sr.[114] No longer facing the possibility of conviction and imprisonment, Belknap decided not to follow through on his threat to sue Pierrepont.[112]

Later career edit

 
1880 Puck Cartoon

Having been disgraced by the Senate trial, Belknap sought to escape from the scrutiny and disapproval of Washington society by moving to Philadelphia.[115] The Belknaps remained married; Amanda and the children visited the Catskills, Coney Island, and other resorts, and Belknap saw them periodically.[115] Belknap later resided in Keokuk, where he practiced law that largely involved representing railroads.[116] Although he was no longer involved in politics or government, Belknap often returned to Washington to represent clients, and maintained a residence and office there.[116]

Years after his impeachment, Belknap's reputation publicly still remained damaged by corruption charges.[117] During the 1880 presidential race, he was among those lampooned in a Puck magazine cartoon (Grant the Acrobat, by Joseph Ferdinand Keppler) opposing Ulysses S. Grant's bid for a third term.[118]

One historian, L.D. Ingersoll, however, defended Belknap in 1880, saying "General Belknap came out of the terrible ordeal with "troops of friends" still standing behind him, notably old army comrades in the army and those who were especially familiar with his conduct of the general affairs of the War Department. These with many public men of the highest standing, insist that he is a much abused man."[119]

Belknap remained popular among his fellow Civil War veterans; in 1887, Belknap coauthored the book History of the Fifteenth Regiment, Iowa Veteran Volunteer Infantry.[115]

Death, burial and memorial edit

Belknap died suddenly from a massive heart attack in Washington, D.C. on Sunday October 12, 1890.[2] The New York Times stated that his death occurred on Sunday between 1:00 a.m. and 9:00 a.m., and that he died alone at his residence in the Evans building on New York Avenue.[2][120] Prior to his death, Belknap had played cards with his friends on Saturday night, then retired upstairs for the evening.[2][120] Belknap's wife, Amanda, was in New York City at the time.[120]

At 8:30 a.m. on Monday morning, Belknap's business associate, John W. Cameron, picked up Belknap's mail on the first floor of Belknap's home, where he maintained his law office, and proceeded to the second floor, where Belknap lived.[2] Cameron and a maid found that all the rooms had been locked.[2] A janitor was summoned to open the doors, and a step ladder was used to peer into Belknap's bedroom.[2] Belknap had placed his hat and coat on a chair and his lifeless body was found on his bed.[2] His left arm had been raised toward his head with his left hand tightly clenched.[2] The bed clothes were disheveled and he appeared to have struggled for breath.[2] The physician who initially examined the body stated that he had died of apoplexy; however, an autopsy by the coroner revealed that Belknap suffered from heart disease.[2][121] The War Department was notified and received with "genuine sorrow" the news of Belknap's death, since Belknap had been a popular Secretary of War.[120]

Belknap was buried in Section 1 at Arlington National Cemetery on October 16, 1890.[122] The ceremony was conducted by St. John's Episcopal Church. The site features a granite gravestone with a bronze relief memorial designed by sculptor Carl Rohl-Smith.[123] The bronze relief (2 ft. x 2 ft.) bust shows Belknap wearing a dress uniform with his hair parted on the right side as well as a long, full beard.[123] The relief is located on the front of a granite base (6 ft. x 5 ft. x 5 ft.).[123] This piece was surveyed by the Smithsonian's Save Outdoor Sculpture! survey in 1995 and its condition was described as "Treatment being needed".[123] The relief is signed by the artist: C.R. 1897.[124]

 
Belknap Gravestone and Memorial
Front

A plaque on the front of the granite base is inscribed:

WILLIAM WORTH BELKNAP
BORN 1829 – DIED 1890
COLONEL 15TH IOWA VOL. INFANTRY
BRIGADIER & BREVET MAJOR GENERAL U.S.VOLS.
SECRETARY OF WAR 1869–1876
ERECTED BY HIS COMRADES OF THE
CROCKER IOWA BRIGADE
11TH, 13TH, 15TH AND 16TH IOWA VOL. INFANTRY
ARMY OF THE TENNESSEE.
COMPANIONS OF THE MILITARY ORDER OF THE
LOYAL LEGION OF THE UNITED STATES
AND OTHER FRIENDS[124]

Historical reputation edit

Prior to Belknap's 1876 shocking resignation, Belknap's reputation was one of a war hero who honorably served the Union Army.[125] There were no rumors of corruption while he served under Johnson as a Treasury collector. Even up to 1876, Belknap, under Grant, was believed to be a faithful judicious Secretary of War, publicly recognized for aiding and protecting 100,000 homeless Chicago fire victims.

In 2003 biographer Edward S. Cooper described Belknap as a man of virtues and flaws.[126] According to Cooper, Belknap "willingly turned to graft to support the social ambitions of his wives" while living a lavish lifestyle in Washington, D.C., at the expense of soldiers and Indians during the Gilded Age.[127] Belknap is positively credited by Cooper for creating and expanding the weather bureau, reforming the military justice system, and for preserving Mathew Brady's photographic record of the Civil War.[126] Belknap's abrupt and controversial resignation in March 1876 caused an unprecedented succession of four Secretaries of War within a 13-month time period: Belknap, Alphonso Taft, J. Donald Cameron, and George W. McCrary.

In Keokuk, Belknap is remembered for being one of its "colorful citizens" and he has two streets named after him.[116] He was commended by his Army colleagues for his coolness under fire during the Civil War, but his reputation suffered as the result of his forced resignation as Grant's Secretary of War, which took place under a cloud amid suspicions of misconduct.[116]

 
Belknap's home in Keokuk – Built 1854

Belknap's name resurfaced in January 2021, due to the similarity between Belknap's 1876 impeachment trial and President Donald Trump's 2021 impeachment trial, since both had left office by the time the trial had commenced.[128]

Andra Belknap, a Belknap descendant, said, "William Worth Belknap was by many accounts a hero of the Civil War. He served the Union Army, and during the Battle of Shiloh, he was injured and had his horse shot down under him. And still, he continued in battle. During the Battle of Atlanta, he personally took a Confederate officer prisoner (supposedly dragging the man by the collar across the battlefield). His Civil War heroism, however, has been largely forgotten by history — even forgotten by his own family. His impeachment is what remains in the history books." [125]

Legacy edit

A collection of his family's records and papers and several boxes of letters received by Belknap are located at Princeton University, where he was a member of the class of 1848.[129]

His son Hugh R. Belknap served as a U.S. congressman from Illinois.[5]

List of Indian campaigns, battles, and wars involving the United States edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c Dictionary of American Biography (1936), William Worth Belknap
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u "Belknap's Sudden Death", New York Times (October 14, 1890)
  3. ^ a b c d Glass 2017.
  4. ^ a b c Gen. Belknap's Career.
  5. ^ a b "Representative William Worth Belknap". The Iowa Legislature.
  6. ^ "William Worth Belknap". The Iowa Legislature.
  7. ^ [2][5][6]
  8. ^ Ingersoll 1880, p. 566.
  9. ^ Cooper 2003, p. 61.
  10. ^ a b c d e Koster (2010), pp. 59–60.
  11. ^ The History of Lee County, Iowa: Containing a History of the County, Its Cities, Towns, Etc. Western Historical Company. January 1, 1879 – via Internet Archive. alice belknap marriage.
  12. ^ Grimmett, Richard F. (January 1, 2009). St. John's Church, Lafayette Square: The History and Heritage of the Church of the Presidents, Washington, D.C. Hillcrest Publishing Group. ISBN 97-81934248539 – via Google Books.
  13. ^ Form: An Illustrated Weekly Pub. Every Sat. in the Interests of American Society at Home and Abroad
  14. ^ "Miss Belknap's Engagement". Chicago Tribune. October 25, 1896. p. 1.
  15. ^ "The Capital". Capital Publishing Company. January 1, 1897 – via Google Books.
  16. ^ "The Capital". Capital Publishing Company. January 1, 1898 – via Google Books.
  17. ^ Cooper 2003, p. 58.
  18. ^ Beaman, D. C. (1905). "The Battle or Athens, Missouri". The Annals of Iowa. 3. University of Iowa. 6 (8): 590–593. doi:10.17077/0003-4827.3095.
  19. ^ a b c Roster and Record of Iowa Soldiers in the War of the Rebellion Together with Historical Sketches of Volunteer Organizations 1861–1866, 9th–16th—Regiments—Infantry. Vol. II. Des Moines: Emory H. English, State Printer. E. D. Chassell, State Binder. 1908. p. 895 – via the Wayback Machine.
  20. ^ "Belknap, William W." Civil War Soldiers. National Park Service. Retrieved February 11, 2024.
  21. ^ Cooper 2003, pp. 64–65.
  22. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Ingersoll (1880), pp. 566–577
  23. ^ War of the Rebellion: A Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies. Prepared under the direction of the Secretary of War, by Bvt. Lieut. Col. Robert N. Scott, Third U.S. Artillery and Published Pursuant to Act of Congress approved June 16, 1880. 1. Vol. 10. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office. 1881. p. 289 – via the Wayback Machine.   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  24. ^ Bonekemper 2012, pp. 59, 63–64; Smith 2001, p. 206.
  25. ^ a b c d e f Belknap-Tyler (1887), p. 609
  26. ^ White 2016, p. 243; Miller 2019, p. xii; Chernow 2017, p. 236.
  27. ^ Kountz, John S. (1901). Record of the Organizations Engaged in the Campaign, Siege, and Defense of Vicksburg. p. 35. Retrieved April 12, 2021.
  28. ^ a b c d e Severance (2012), Portraits of Conflict: A Photographic History of Alabama in the Civil War, p. 213
  29. ^ Belknap-Tyler (1887), p. 24
  30. ^ W. H. Chamberlin. "Hood's Second Sortie at Atlanta," in Johnson, Robert Underwood and Buel, Clarence Clough, edd., Battles and Leaders of the Civil War, Vol. IV, p. 331. ISBN 0-89009-572-8.
  31. ^ Ingersoll 1880, p. 568.
  32. ^ a b c "William W. Belknap". Iowa Historical Record. Vol. I–III. Iowa City, IA: Iowa State Historical Society. July 1, 1885. p. 99 – via Google Books.
  33. ^ a b c Koster (2010), p. 59
  34. ^ a b c Smith (2001), pp. 542–543
  35. ^ a b Chernow 2017, pp. 669–670.
  36. ^ Bell (1981), p. 78
  37. ^ a b Donovan (2008), pp. 104–105
  38. ^ Simon ( 2003), The Papers of Ulysses S. Grant, Vol. 5, 1874
  39. ^ Smith (2001), p. 543
  40. ^ "Calculate Duration Between Two Dates". timeanddate.com.
  41. ^ a b c d e f g Bell (1981), p. 8
  42. ^ a b Forty First Congress, Statutes At Large, pp. 319–320
  43. ^ Koster, pp. 59–60
  44. ^ a b c d White 2016, p. 564.
  45. ^ Koster pp. 58–59
  46. ^ Behncke & Bloomfield (2020), pp. 181–182.
  47. ^ a b c Koster, p. 58
  48. ^ Hofling (1981), p. 30
  49. ^ a b c d A Sad Week For The Capital.
  50. ^ a b c d e McFeely (1981), p. 58
  51. ^ a b c d e f g White 2016, p. 565.
  52. ^ a b c Purcell 2008.
  53. ^ a b Brands 2012, p. 560.
  54. ^ a b c Lamphier 2003, p. 144.
  55. ^ a b c d e f McFeely (1981), pp. 150–151
  56. ^ Doukas (2003), p. 80
  57. ^ McFeely (1981), p. 375
  58. ^ McFeely (1981), p. 377
  59. ^ McFeely (1981), pp. 377–378
  60. ^ a b c d McFeely (1981), p. 378
  61. ^ McFeely (1981), pp. 375–376.
  62. ^ a b McFeely (1981), p. 379
  63. ^ New York Times (August 23, 1873), The Military Academy Report of the Board of West Point Visitors
  64. ^ Cowan's (June 24, 2009), West Point Superintendent Thomas H. Ruger Archive 2010-09-23 at the Wayback Machine
  65. ^ Belknap (Nov. 17, 1871), Frohne's Historic Military[dead link]
  66. ^ Art of the Possible Online (July 3, 2009), James Webster Smith and Henry O. Flipper November 23, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  67. ^ Reading Eagle, Armies First Black Cadet Gets Bars 123 Years Later, p. A13
  68. ^ a b c d New York Times (October 11, 1871), The Ruined City
  69. ^ a b c d e f New York Times (December 4, 1871).
  70. ^ Coakley (1988), pp. 316–317
  71. ^ Coakley (1988), pp. 317–318
  72. ^ Hogue (2006), Uncivil War, pp. 58–59
  73. ^ a b Dawson (1982), pp. 117–118
  74. ^ a b Coakley (1988), pp. 318–319
  75. ^ a b Coakley (1988), p. 319
  76. ^ a b Coakley (1988), pp. 319–320
  77. ^ a b Coakley (1988), p. 320
  78. ^ a b Coakley (1988), pp. 321–322
  79. ^ a b c Stevens (2008), pp. 99–100
  80. ^ a b c Stevens (2008), pp. 100–101
  81. ^ a b Stevens (2008), pp. 101–102
  82. ^ Eads Bridge infosite, en.structurae.de; accessed June 19, 2015.
  83. ^ Wilson, Robert (2013). Mathew Brady: Portraits of a Nation. New York: Bloomsbury Publishing Company. pp. 210–211. ISBN 978-1-62040-203-0.
  84. ^ a b c d Mathew Brady: Portraits of a Nation.
  85. ^ Mathew Brady Photographs of Civil War-Era Personalities and Scenes. Record Group 111: Records of the Office of the Chief Signal Officer, 1860 - 1985. National Archives and Records Administration. Retrieved January 10, 2017.
  86. ^ "Mathew Brady Photographs of Civil War-Era Personalities and Scenes".
  87. ^ a b c Scott (2007), p. 105
  88. ^ Cambell (1909), p. 72
  89. ^ a b Scott (2007), pp. 105–106
  90. ^ a b Bonney, Orrin H. (1970). Battle Drums and Geysers-The Life And Journals Of Lt. Gustavus Cheyney Doane, Soldier And Explorer Of The Yellowstone And Snake River Regions. Chicago: Swallow Press. pp. 47–50.
  91. ^ Scott (2007), p. 106
  92. ^ Scott (2007), pp. 106–107
  93. ^ a b c d e Jeffrey Ostler (2004) The Plains Sioux and U.S. Colonialism from Lewis and Clark to Wounded Knee, pp. 60–62
  94. ^ Smith 2001, pp. 538.
  95. ^ Secretary of the Interior to the Secretary of War, February 1, 1876, National Archives
  96. ^ Colonel Drum to Gen. Terry and Gen. Crook, February 8, 1876, National Archives
  97. ^ Collins, Jr., Charles D. Atlas of the Sioux Wars, Second edition, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas: Combat Studies Institute Press, 2006, Map 14, 15
  98. ^ a b McFeely (1981), Grant, p. 433
  99. ^ McFeely (1981), Grant, p. 434
  100. ^ a b "Hinds' Precedents, Volume 3 - Chapter 63 - Nature of Impeachment: Accused may be tried after resignation, § 2007". Retrieved March 3, 2021.
  101. ^ a b Hinds' Precedents.
  102. ^ "House votes to impeach DHS Secretary Mayorkas over border crisis". Fox News. February 13, 2024.
  103. ^ Craig, Bryan (January 9, 2020). "Resignation was Not the End". Miller Center. Charlottesville, VA: University of Virginia. Retrieved January 14, 2021.
  104. ^ Koenig, Louis W. (December 1965). "From Failing Hands, The Story of Presidential Succession. By John D. Feerick. (New York: Fordham University Press, 1965. Pp. 368. $6.95.)". American Political Science Review. 59 (4): 1035. doi:10.1017/s0003055400133027. ISSN 0003-0554. S2CID 147181749.
  105. ^ a b c d e f Purcell 2008, p. 34.
  106. ^ Hinds' Precedents, p. 934.
  107. ^ a b c McFeely (1974), p. 152
  108. ^ Lord, Moses. "H. Rept. 44-791 - Report of the House managers of the impeachment of W.W. Belknap, late Secretary of War. August 2, 1876. -- Laid on the table and ordered to be printed". U.S. Government Printing Office. Retrieved June 17, 2023.
  109. ^ a b Biographical Dictionary of America 1906, p. 280.
  110. ^ a b c d e f g Cooper 2003, p. 311.
  111. ^ Smith 2001, pp. 543, 595.
  112. ^ a b c d Cooper 2003, p. 310.
  113. ^ a b New York Times (August 2, 2012), "Acquittal of Belknap"
  114. ^ a b New York Times, "The Suit Against Gen. Belknap"
  115. ^ a b c Cooper (2003) William Worth Belknap: An American Disgrace, pp. 312–313
  116. ^ a b c d Sloat 2017.
  117. ^ "A Model Grant Procession: A Forecast of the Campaign for Empire in 1884". The Boston Globe. Boston, MA. October 13, 1880. p. 5 – via Newspapers.com.
  118. ^ Nowlan, Robert A. (2016). The American Presidents From Polk to Hayes. Denver: Outskirts Press, Inc. p. 498. ISBN 978-1-4787-6572-1.
  119. ^ Ingersoll 1880, pp. 569–571.
  120. ^ a b c d The Milwaukee Journal, "Dying A Solitary Death"
  121. ^ Spokane Falls Review, "Death Of General Belknap"
  122. ^ "Burial Detail: Belknap, William Worth (Section 1, Grave 132)". ANC Explorer. Arlington National Cemetery. Retrieved December 19, 2020.
  123. ^ a b c d "William Worth Belknap Monument, (Sculpture)". National Portrait Gallery. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved January 14, 2021.
  124. ^ a b Smithsonian (1995). "William Worth Belknap Monument, (sculpture)". Save Outdoor Sculpture. Smithsonian. Retrieved December 31, 2010.
  125. ^ a b Belknap 2021.
  126. ^ a b Cooper (2003) William Worth Belknap: An American Disgrace, p. 13
  127. ^ Cooper (2003) William Worth Belknap: An American Disgrace, pp. 12–13
  128. ^ Gaard 2021.
  129. ^ "William W. Belknap Papers". Princeton University. Retrieved February 12, 2024.

Sources edit

Books edit

  • Behncke, Ted; Bloomfield, Gary (2020). Custer. Philadelphia & Oxford: Casemate. ISBN 978-1-61200-889-9.
  • Belknap, William W.; Tyler, Loren S. (1887). William W. Belknap (ed.). History of the Fifteenth Regiment, Iowa Veteran Volunteer Infantry. Keokuk, Iowa: R.B. Ogden & Son, Print.
  • Brands, H. W. (2012). The Man Who Saved the Union: Ulysses S. Grant in War and Peace. New York: Doubleday. ISBN 978-0-385-53241-9.
  • Bonekemper, Edward H. (2012). Grant and Lee. Washington, DC: Regnery History. ISBN 978-1-62157-010-3.
  • Cooper, Edward S. (2003). William Worth Belknap: an American Disgrace. Cranbury, New Jersey: Rosemont Publishing & Printing Corp. ISBN 0-8386-3990-9.
  • Chernow, Ron (2017). Grant. New York: Penguin Press. ISBN 978-1-5942-0487-6.
  • Coakley, Robert W. (1988). Davis S. Trask (ed.). The Role of Federal Military Forces in Domestic Disorders, 1789–1878. Army Historical Series. Washington, D.C.: Center of Military History United States Army.
  • Dawson III, Joseph G. (1982). Army Generals and Reconstruction: Louisiana, 1862–1877. Louisiana State University: Louisiana State University Press. ISBN 978-0-8071-1960-0.
  • Donovan, James (2008). A Terrible Glory: Custer and the Little Bighorn. New York City: Little, Brown, and Company. ISBN 978-0-316-15578-6.
  • Hinds, Asher C. (1907). Hinds' Precedents of the House of Representatives of the United States. Vol. III. Washington, D.C.: US Government Printing Office. pp. 903–903, 922, 934.
  • Hofling, Charles K. (1981). Custer and the Little Big Horn: A Psychobiographical Inquiry. Detroit: Wayne State University Press. ISBN 0-8143-1814-2.
  • Ingersoll, L.D. (1880). A History of the War Department of the United States. Washington D.C.: Francis B. Mohun. pp. 566–571.
  • Lamphier, Peg A. (2003). Kate Chase and William Sprague: Politics and Gender in a Civil War Marriage. Lincoln, Nebraska: University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 0-8032-2947-X.
  • McFeely, William S. (1981). Grant: A Biography. New York City: W.W. Norton & Company, LTD. ISBN 0-393-01372-3.
  • Miller, Donald L. (2019). Vicksburg: Grant's Campaign That Broke the Confederacy. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 978-1-4516-4137-0.
  • Purcell, L. Edward (2008). David Hudson; Marvin Bergman; Loren Horton (eds.). The Biographical Dictionary of Iowa. Iowa City: University of Iowa Press. pp. 33–34. ISBN 978-1-58729-685-7.
  • Smith, Jean Edward (2001). Grant. New York City: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0-684-84927-5.
  • White, Ronald C. (2016). American Ulysses: A Life of Ulysses S. Grant. Random House Publishing Group. ISBN 978-1-5883-6992-5.

Articles edit

  • Koster, John (June 2010). "The Belknap Scandal Fulcrum to Disaster". Wild West: 58–64.

Newspapers edit

  • "Belknap's Sudden Death" (PDF). New York Times. October 14, 1890. Retrieved March 20, 2012.
  • "Gen. Belknap's Career" (PDF). New York Times. March 3, 1876.
  • "A Sad Week For The Capital" (PDF). New York Times. March 6, 1876.
  • Sloat, Jerry (January 26, 2017). "Belknap was one of Keokuk's colorful citizens". Fort Madison Daily Democrat. Fort Madison, Iowa.
  • "The War Department. Annual Report of the Secretary of War on the Operations of the Department for the Year 1871" (PDF). New York Times, New York. December 4, 1871.

Dictionaries edit

  • Rossiter Johnson, ed. (1906). Biographical Dictionary of America Belknap, William Worth. Boston: American Biographical Society. pp. 280–281.
  • Dictionary of American Biography William Worth Belknap. New York City: Charles Scribner's Sons. 1936.
  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Belknap, William Worth" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 3 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 684.

Internet edit

  • Glass, Andrew (May 5, 2017). "Senate holds former war secretary's impeachment trial, May 4, 1876". politico.com.
  • Belknap, Andra (January 14, 2021). "Congress impeached and tried my ancestor after he left office. Trump could be next". USA Today. Retrieved May 23, 2021.
  • Gaard, Tom (January 23, 2021). "Trump impeachment resurfaces Iowan William Belknap's roller-coaster 19th-century story". Des Moines Register. Retrieved May 14, 2021.

External links edit

  • Federal Impeachment William W. Belknap Library of Congress Research Guides
  • Belknap biography June 8, 2010, at the Wayback Machine, history.army.mil
  • "William Worth Belknap". at ArlingtonCemetery.net. April 5, 2023. (Unofficial website).
Political offices
Preceded by United States Secretary of War
1869–1876
Succeeded by
Iowa House of Representatives
Preceded by
District Established
Member of the Iowa House of Representatives from District 54 (Keokuk)
1858–1860
Succeeded by
George William Reddick

william, belknap, father, army, veteran, several, wars, william, belknap, william, worth, belknap, september, 1829, october, 1890, lawyer, union, army, officer, government, administrator, iowa, 30th, united, states, secretary, serving, under, president, ulysse. For his father the U S Army veteran of several wars see William G Belknap William Worth Belknap September 22 1829 October 12 1890 was a lawyer Union Army officer government administrator in Iowa and the 30th United States Secretary of War serving under President Ulysses S Grant Belknap was impeached on March 2 1876 for his role in the trader post scandal but was acquitted by the Senate Belknap was the first cabinet secretary in U S history to be impeached William Belknap30th United States Secretary of WarIn office October 25 1869 March 2 1876PresidentUlysses S GrantPreceded byWilliam Tecumseh Sherman acting Succeeded byAlphonso TaftMember of the Iowa House of Representatives from the 54th districtIn office January 11 1858 January 8 1860Serving with Cyrenus C Bauder andJohn Allen CaseyPreceded byDistrict EstablishedSucceeded byGeorge William ReddickPersonal detailsBornWilliam Worth Belknap 1829 09 22 September 22 1829Newburgh New York U S DiedOctober 12 1890 1890 10 12 aged 61 Washington D C U S Political partyDemocratic before 1865 Republican after 1865 SpousesCora LeRoy m 1854 died 1862 wbr Carrie Tomlinson m 1869 died 1870 wbr Amanda Tomlinson Bower m 1873 wbr EducationCollege of New Jersey BA Georgetown UniversityMilitary serviceAllegianceUnited StatesBranch serviceU S Army Union Army Years of service1861 Iowa Home Guard 1861 1865 Army RankCaptain Iowa Home Guard Brigadier General USA Brevet Major General of volunteersUnitIowa Home Guard15th Iowa Infantry RegimentXVII CorpsCommandsKeokuk City Rifles 1861 15th Iowa Infantry 1861 1864 4th Regiment XVII Corps 1864 1865 Battles warsAmerican Civil War Battle of Athens Battle of Shiloh First Battle of Corinth Siege of Vicksburg Battle of Atlanta Battle of Ezra Church Atlanta Campaign Sherman s March to the SeaA native of New York Belknap graduated from the College of New Jersey now Princeton University in 1848 studied law with a Georgetown attorney and passed the bar in 1851 He moved to Iowa where he practiced law in partnership with Ralph P Lowe Belknap entered politics as a Democrat and served one term in the Iowa House of Representatives When the American Civil War broke out in 1861 Belknap joined the Union Army A tall burly man Belknap was a natural Union Army leader and recruiter A veteran of the Iowa Home Guard who had attained the rank of captain he was commissioned as a major in the 15th Iowa Volunteer Infantry He took part in numerous engagements including Shiloh where he was wounded and Corinth He served as a regimental brigade division and corps commander and served in high level staff positions By the end of the war Belknap had been promoted to brigadier general and received a brevet promotion to major general of volunteers After declining a regular Army commission Belknap was appointed Iowa s Collector of Internal Revenue by President Andrew Johnson he served with distinction for four years In 1869 President Ulysses S Grant appointed Belknap as Secretary of War During his tenure Belknap ordered portraits of all the previous Secretaries intending to create a complete collection in honor of the United States Centennial In 1871 Belknap was investigated by Congress after he was directly involved in the sale of arms and munitions to France while the United States was ostensibly neutral during the Franco Prussian War The same year Belknap had arranged aid for victims of the catastrophic Chicago Fire During the Reconstruction Era Belknap s War Department and the U S military worked under the supervision of President Ulysses S Grant and the United States Attorney General s office to occupy the former Confederacy and attempt to implement changes in government and the economy while protecting freedmen from an increasingly violent insurgency Belknap supported Grant s Reconstruction policy which most Democrats opposed In 1875 Grant Belknap and other members of Grant s administration secretly agreed to remove troops from the Black Hills after gold was discovered The US had protected the area from white settlers as part of a US treaty with the Lakota The withdrawal of troops allowed a gold rush of white settlers to take place and the US took de facto possession after the Lakota refused to sell their sacred lands In 1876 the trader post scandal at Fort Sill led to Belknap s sudden resignation impeachment by the Democratic controlled House and trial by the Senate While a majority of senators voted to convict they lacked the two thirds required and Belknap was acquitted Belknap s Washington D C federal trial was dismissed by Judge Arthur MacArthur Sr After the trial Belknap resumed practicing law in Washington he continued to be popular among Iowa Civil War veterans and was active until he died of a heart attack in 1890 One historian described Belknap as a man of both virtues and flaws a talented lawyer administrator and military officer but whose personal corruption overshadowed his positive qualities Belknap s heroic Union Civil War service has been largely forgotten by historians Contents 1 Early life and career 2 Marriages and family 3 American Civil War 3 1 Shiloh Corinth and Vicksburg 3 2 Battle of Atlanta Battle of Ezra Church and March to the Sea 4 Iowa Collector of Internal Revenue 1865 1869 5 Secretary of War 1869 1876 5 1 War Department portrait gallery 1869 5 2 Indian ring 1870 1876 5 3 French arms sales 1870 5 4 Pardoned Cadet Smith 1871 5 5 Aiding Chicago fire victims 1871 5 6 Requested prisoner and prison reform 1871 5 7 New Orleans 1872 street riot 5 8 Eads Bridge commission 1873 5 9 Preserved Mathew Brady Civil War photos 1874 5 10 Yellowstone expedition 1875 5 11 Great Sioux War 1876 5 12 Corruption resignation and House impeachment 1876 6 Senate trial house arrest and Senate acquittal 7 Washington D C indictment 1876 1877 8 Later career 9 Death burial and memorial 10 Historical reputation 11 Legacy 12 List of Indian campaigns battles and wars involving the United States 13 See also 14 Notes 15 Sources 15 1 Books 15 2 Articles 15 3 Newspapers 15 4 Dictionaries 15 5 Internet 16 External linksEarly life and career edit nbsp William G BelknapFatherWilliam Worth Belknap was born in Newburgh New York on September 22 1829 the son of career soldier William G Belknap and Anne Clark Belknap 1 Belknap s father had fought with distinction in the War of 1812 Florida War and Mexican American War 2 3 Belknap attended the local schools in Newburgh and graduated from the College of New Jersey at Princeton in 1848 2 In addition to attending Princeton with Hiester Clymer the Democratic Congressman who later led the investigation into Belknap s War Department corruption Belknap was a college contemporary of Grant s Secretary of Navy George M Robeson who was one year behind Clymer and Belknap at Princeton 4 After graduation he studied law with Georgetown attorney Hugh E Caperton After passing an examination by Judge William Cranch in 1851 Belknap was admitted to the Washington D C bar and began looking for a place to settle and begin his career He moved west to Keokuk Iowa and entered into a partnership with Ralph P Lowe 2 Deciding to make Iowa his permanent residence in 1854 Belknap had a home built in Keokuk He joined the Democratic Party and successfully ran for state office in 1856 serving in the Iowa House of Representatives from the District 54 between 1858 and 1860 7 Belknap was looked on as a rising Iowa Democratic leader 8 Belknap also joined a local company of the Iowa Home Guard the Keokuk City Rifles and he attained the rank of captain 9 Marriages and family editIn 1854 Belknap married Cora LeRoy who died in 1862 They had one child together Hugh R Belknap who served as a U S representative from Illinois 10 Belknap married Carita S Tomlinson of Kentucky in January 1869 10 she died of tuberculosis shortly after childbirth in December 1870 10 Belknap married again on December 11 1873 to Amanda nee Tomlinson Bower his second wife s widowed sister 10 They had a daughter together Alice Belknap born November 28 1874 11 12 Alice Belknap was considered one of Washington society s most sought after belles 13 In 1897 she reportedly converted to Judaism for her engagement to Paul May an attache of the Belgian legation in Washington 14 15 The engagement was broken the following year and in June 1898 Alice Belknap married William Barklie Henry of Philadelphia 16 American Civil War edit nbsp Major General BelknapWhen the American Civil War started Belknap remained loyal to the Union as a pro war Democrat 17 He first saw action in the Battle of Athens as the captain of the Keokuk City Rifles 18 a company of the Iowa Home Guard He enlisted in the Union Army as a volunteer on November 7 1861 and was commissioned as a major On December 7 he was mustered 19 and tasked with raising and equipping the 15th Iowa Volunteer Infantry 2 Belknap was assigned to Companies F amp S 20 A rugged charismatic and handsome man Belknap was well suited to the rigors of being a soldier At over six feet tall and 200 pounds with blue eyes and fair hair mustache and beard Belknap was a natural leader described as a fine type of Saxon American manhood 4 In addition the public speaking skills and powers of persuasion he had developed as a lawyer made him an effective recruiter 21 Belknap was a natural soldier whose leadership skills loud voice and militia experience were assets in the training of newly enlisted privates 22 Shiloh Corinth and Vicksburg edit nbsp Battle of ShilohIn March 1862 Maj Belknap and the 15th Iowa Volunteer Infantry were mustered into military action 22 Traveling by steamer from St Louis Belknap was sent to the front at the Battle of Shiloh arriving at Pittsburgh Landing on April 6 joining the Army of the Tennessee under the authority of Union General Ulysses S Grant 22 Belknap and his men were ordered to the front to serve under Maj Gen Benjamin M Prentiss at the Hornet s Nest 22 Belknap and his raw 15th Iowa Volunteer Infantry troops were forced to fight like regular army veterans on Prentiss s depleted line 22 Belknap was slightly wounded in the shoulder 19 and his horse was shot and killed from under him Afterwards he continued on the field on foot 23 22 Reinforced the Union Army under General Grant forced the Confederates to retreat back to Corinth and Shiloh was considered a Union victory 24 nbsp Charge of the Federals Battle of Corinth 1862 After Shiloh Belknap served as acting commander of the 15th Iowa Volunteer Infantry at the Battle of Corinth 22 Col Hugh T Reid commander of the 15th Iowa Volunteer Infantry had been severely injured in the neck at Shiloh and removed from active duty 25 Col Reid stated that at Shiloh Belknap was always in the right place at the right time directing and encouraging officers and men as coolly as a veteran 1 At Corinth Belknap was noted for his conspicuous gallantry 1 After Corinth Belknap and the 15th Iowa Volunteer Infantry for a time served on guard duty 22 25 Belknap was formally promoted from major to lieutenant colonel on August 20 1862 Belknap was promoted from lieutenant colonel to colonel of the Iowa 15th Volunteer Infantry on June 3 1863 22 nbsp Siege of VicksburgThe Union capture of Vicksburg the last Confederate stronghold on the Mississippi was vital and would split the Confederacy in two 26 Belknap s primary military operation took place at the Siege of Vicksburg until Confederate General John C Pemberton surrendered to Union General Grant on July 4 1863 2 22 Colonel Belknap Fifteenth Iowa was part of the Third Brigade of the Sixth Division serving under Major General John McArthur 27 On December 24 1863 Belknap was in command of the 11th Iowa Volunteer Infantry and the 15th Iowa Volunteer Infantry reinforcing Redbone Mississippi south of Vicksburg 25 On February 26 1864 Belknap served as provost marshal of post in Canton Mississippi 25 Battle of Atlanta Battle of Ezra Church and March to the Sea edit nbsp Battle of AtlantaOn June 8 1864 Col Belknap and the veteran 15th Iowa Volunteer Infantry were transferred to the 4th Division XVII Corps at Ackworth Georgia 22 On July 22 1864 at the Battle of Atlanta Belknap served with distinction fighting against the 45th Alabama Infantry 2 28 Belknap and his Iowa troops dug in and set up earthworks and a parapet around Bald Hill 28 The 45th Alabama infantry led by Confederate Col Harris D Lampley assaulted the entrenched Union line two times but were repelled by massive Union gun power 28 On the second attempt Lampley and his remaining men crossed over to the Union line for hand to hand combat Lampley who had been shot cursed his men who had fallen or were retreating 28 In the midst of the fierce fighting the burly Belknap grabbed the wounded Lampley by the collar spun him around to face the Confederate lines and shouted Look at your men They are dead What are you cursing them for 29 Belknap took the wounded Lampley prisoner he was held until his death on August 24 28 William H Chamberlain of the 81st Ohio Infantry Regiment later wrote The next day July 23 1864 I remember seeing Colonel Wm W Belknap of the 15th Iowa afterward Brigadier General and Secretary of War He was a brawny red bearded giant in appearance and it was told of him that he had captured a number of prisoners by pulling them over the breastworks by main force so closely were the lines engaged 30 On July 28 1864 at the Battle of Ezra Church Belknap was in charge of the 15th Iowa Volunteer Infantry and the 32nd Ohio Volunteer Infantry which reinforced Maj Gen Morgan Lewis Smith s XV Corps 25 31 On July 30 Belknap was promoted to brigadier general as commander of the 4th Division XVII Corps and participated in Major Gen Sherman s operations in Georgia and the Carolinas 2 25 After Atlanta was taken by the Union Army Belknap accompanied Maj Gen Sherman on his March to the Sea 2 Belknap was promoted to Brevet Major General of Volunteers on March 13 1865 19 as a reward for his bravery in the Atlanta Campaign 2 Having declined a regular Army commission on August 24 1865 Belknap was mustered out of the U S Army 2 Iowa Collector of Internal Revenue 1865 1869 editIn 1865 President Andrew Johnson appointed Belknap Collector of Internal Revenue for Iowa s 1st District 32 In this position Belknap was responsible for collecting millions of dollars in federal taxes collectors were paid a percentage of the revenue they brought in which made the position lucrative and highly sought after 33 Belknap served for four years until he was appointed Secretary of War by President Ulysses S Grant in 1869 10 During his term as Collector which coincided with the Reconstruction Era Belknap associated himself with the Republican Party 32 Belknap served with distinction when his Collector s accounts were settled they were accurate to within four cents 32 Secretary of War 1869 1876 edit nbsp William W Belknap30th U S Secretary of WarHuntington 1874On the advice of General of the Army William T Sherman President Ulysses S Grant appointed Belknap to Secretary of War on October 25 1869 to take the place of Secretary John A Rawlins who had died in office of tuberculosis 34 35 Sherman himself had served briefly as acting secretary of war after Rawlins s death 35 Belknap was seen as a protege of Sherman s having fought in the Atlanta Campaign and accompanied him on Sherman s March to the Sea 34 President Grant believed Belknap had served capably during the American Civil War and deserved to head the War Department 34 After his appointment Belknap implemented or recommended several positive initiatives He recommended that Congress act to fix the date of May 1 as the start of the fiscal year allowing for more accurate accounting of department funds He inaugurated the preparation of historical reports by post commanders as a way to document their activities for posterity and proposed actions to preserve Yellowstone National Park 36 Not all of Belknap s actions were well received however He bypassed Sherman when making appointments and reduced Sherman s budget thus weakening the authority of the General of the Army position In 1874 Sherman responded by leaving Washington and moving his headquarters to St Louis 37 Major General Oliver O Howard was also ostracized by Belknap While stationed in Oregon in 1874 Major General Howard candidly expressed his opinion of Belknap Howard stated that Belknap was deceptive to General Grant that Belknap was not a true Republican and that he associated nightly with foul mouthed Democratic Kentucky associates Howard also opined that Belknap was not in favor of the President s Indian Peace policy 38 That statement is likely related to a conflict during Belknap s tenure between the War and Interior Departments as to which would exercise control over American Indian policy 37 In the context of this era Belknap s actions may not be seen as overly aggressive or overreaching In terms of Reconstruction historian Jean Edward Smith notes that Grant a former General of the Army personally supervised the use of the U S military and that Belknap had less freedom of action than other cabinet members 39 Belknap held office for 6 years 4 months and 7 days 40 War Department portrait gallery 1869 edit Upon assuming office in 1869 Belknap conceived the idea of creating portraits of previous civilian heads of the War Department in honor of the upcoming 1876 U S Centennial 41 and hired renowned artists Daniel Huntington Robert Weir and Henry Ulke 41 Belknap s portrait was painted by Huntington in 1874 41 The portraits were assembled into a distinct collection to be viewed by the public 41 The portrait initiative was continued by Belknap s successors 41 in addition to secretaries the collection came to include others notable for their military distinction 41 This effort at historic preservation was considered a success and Belknap received unqualified credit for his creation of the War Department portrait gallery 41 Indian ring 1870 1876 edit nbsp Fort SillOklahoma Indian TerritoryDuring the summer of 1870 Belknap successfully lobbied Congress to grant him the sole power to appoint and license agents known as sutlers with ownership rights to highly lucrative traderships at U S military forts in the Western frontier 33 42 These monopoly traderships were considered good investments during the Gilded Age and were highly sought after 43 44 On July 15 the Commanding General of the Army s power to appoint traderships was repealed empowering Belknap while further eroding Sherman s authority 42 To ensure maximum profits Belknap ordered soldiers stationed at forts having Belknap approved sutlers to buy supplies only through the authorized traderships 33 Soldiers on the Western frontier who were thus forced to buy goods at exorbitant prices that far exceeded the usual rate were left in debt or destitute as a result 45 One 7th Cavalry Sergeant noted that a shot of whiskey mostly glass cost 25 cents 25 1871 5 40 2019 glass at a time when soldiers were paid a few dollars 1 00 1871 21 60 2019 a month 46 Hostile American Indians bought supplies at these traderships including high quality single shot breech loaders and repeating rifles 47 At the same time Army requisitions for rifles were filled by Belknap s War Department with inferior single shot breech loaders that jammed frequently and were no match for superior breech loaders and repeating rifles 47 The policy had a negative effect on the firepower of the U S troops and may have contributed to the defeat of George Armstrong Custer and the 7th Cavalry at Battle of the Little Big Horn in June 1876 several months after Belknap was out of office 47 However Custer had also decided against bringing Gatling guns these would have increased Custer s firepower even if his troops had been armed with inferior rifles 48 Belknap s second wife Carita was socially ambitious and unwilling to live in Washington D C on Belknap s 8 000 annual salary about 157 000 in 2018 44 When the couple arrived in Washington from Keokuk Iowa in 1869 Belknap rented a large house recently vacated by Secretary of State William H Seward 49 In hosting large parties a typical social requirement for cabinet members the Belknaps overextended their invitations one of their events had 1 200 guests including many young army officers the resulting raucous behavior led to extensive damage and vandalism including destruction of curtains couches and other furniture 49 The Belknaps could not afford to pay for the damages and were faced with leaving Washington society and reducing expenses by living in a boarding house or finding a way to increase their income 49 They decided to look for additional income and Carita engineered a plan to obtain a lucrative cash cow Indian tradership position at the recently built Fort Sill located in the Oklahoma Indian Territory 44 49 Carita lobbied her husband to appoint a New York contractor Caleb P Marsh to the Fort Sill tradership John S Evans an experienced sutler had already been appointed and did not want to give it up 50 44 To settle the question Marsh drew up an illicit partnership contract that allowed Evans to keep the tradership at Fort Sill provided that he pay Marsh 12 000 per year in quarterly installments approximately 236 000 in 2018 51 Marsh in turn was required to give half of his 12 000 to Carita also in quarterly installments 51 All the parties agreed to the arrangement however Carita received only one payment before her death from tuberculosis after childbirth in December 1870 51 After Carita s death Marsh continued to pay the quarterly share of the profits to Carita s younger sister Amanda known as Puss 52 who had moved in with the Belknaps ostensibly to hold as a trust fund for the benefit of Carita s child 50 51 This profiteering arrangement between Amanda and Marsh was all done with Belknap s full knowledge and consent 51 After Carita s child died in June 1871 Amanda left to tour Europe and Belknap continued to take the quarterly bribery payments until December 1873 when Amanda returned and became Belknap s third wife 50 Amanda was a beautiful young socialite intending to keep the modest fortune she inherited from her family while also attaining a high position in Washington society she required Belknap to sign a prenuptial agreement 53 Belknap rented a large new house on G Street which had been built by Orville Babcock President Grant s personal secretary 4 From that time onward Belknap and Amanda continued to accept Marsh s quarterly payments 50 51 Amanda was considered to be more self indulgent than her sister Carita donning gorgeous gowns jewelry and other accessories for parties and other events and called the spendthrift belle by Washington society 51 54 The Belknaps extravagant lifestyle entertaining Washington society holding lavish parties and wearing elegant clothes created envy among both Democratic political figures and permanent residents of Washington 3 52 53 54 However that the Belknaps were receiving kickbacks was not publicly known until February 1876 when the Democratic controlled House of Representatives launched an investigation 50 52 which discovered that Belknap and his wives had received about 20 000 approximately 394 000 in 2018 in bribes from Marsh 54 French arms sales 1870 edit During the Franco Prussian War from 1870 to 1871 the United States declared neutrality 55 Belknap had been accused by Grant administration critics including Senators Charles Sumner and Carl Schurz of violating neutrality and selling arms to French agents 55 In fact Belknap had sold obsolete U S War Department firearms to a neighbor of the Remington family which owned the E Remington and Sons firearms and ammunition company 55 Samuel Remington as an arms selling agent to the French Government then arranged the sale of those firearms to France 55 56 Belknap subsequently sold 54 000 000 cartridges to the French Army cartridges that would specifically fit the firearms he had previously sold to the Remington neighbor 55 A Congressional investigation that took place in 1872 exonerated Belknap 55 Pardoned Cadet Smith 1871 edit During the Reconstruction Era former slave James Webster Smith became the first African American cadet to enroll at West Point 57 After starting classes in 1870 Smith was immediately and severely hazed by white cadets One of Belknap s nephews a cadet at the academy had been reprimanded but not otherwise punished for hazing Smith 58 In another instance Smith was arrested and taken to a military court for fighting a white cadet though Smith said he had merely defended himself Major General Oliver O Howard an advocate for African American civil rights and in charge of the trial acquitted Smith and gave him a light punishment for unruly conduct 59 This outraged the academy s Bureau of Military Justice who made a formal protest to Belknap on November 20 1870 60 In another hazing incident in January 1871 Smith was arrested for supposedly not holding his head up when marching again after being severely harassed by white cadets 60 With Howard now reassigned to the western United States the academy s administration determined to force Smith out 61 This time he was convicted his case was then appealed to Belknap 60 Smith had been recommended for expulsion but Belknap intervened with President Grant who changed the sentence to setting Smith back academically which caused him to repeat his Plebe year 60 Smith continued at West Point until 1874 when Professor Peter S Michie a white supremacist gave Smith a private test in defiance of traditional West Point practice and claimed that Smith had failed 62 Smith was then denied a chance to retest and was forced out of West Point 62 Belknap concurred when Major General Thomas H Ruger appointed superintendent of West Point in 1871 reduced the hazing of cadets by 1873 and made strong efforts to eradicate the discreditable practice 63 Belknap admired Ruger s performance as West Point Superintendent and stated I am pretty satisfied with the success of your management and private conversations with officers of all grades amp with civilians too who have been there since your accession 64 65 Other African Americans followed Smith s entrance into West Point and Henry O Flipper became the first to graduate from the academy in 1877 66 In 1997 President Bill Clinton attempted to acknowledge and right the wrong done to Smith by awarding him a posthumous commission as a second lieutenant 67 Aiding Chicago fire victims 1871 edit Main article Great Chicago Fire nbsp Belknap aided victims of the devastating 1871 Chicago fire From October 8 to October 10 1871 a devastating fire burned and destroyed much of Chicago killing hundreds of people and causing 200 000 000 nearly 4 billion in 2018 in damages Over 100 000 citizens were left destitute and homeless 68 Belknap took prompt action on October 9 ordering food sent from St Louis tents from Jefferson Barracks and two companies of troops from Fort Omaha to help keep peace and order 68 On October 10 Belknap in writing a dispatch to Lt General Philip Sheridan stated that the fire was a national calamity The sufferers have the sincere sympathy of the nation 68 Belknap ordered military officers around the nation to send supplies to Chicago liberally and promptly 68 In his Annual Report to President Grant in December 1871 Belknap praised the War Department for the efficiency of operations in aiding the homeless and destitute of the Chicago Fire within hours of notification while the fire was still in progress 69 Belknap also praised Sheridan and the several companies of troops under his command for keeping law and order in the ruined city 69 Requested prisoner and prison reform 1871 edit In the summer of 1871 a U S Board of military officers visited the Quebec Canada military prison run by the British Army 69 The board recommended that British methods be adopted in the U S Army including a system of rewards for good behavior and difficult physical exercise and taxing military drill and ceremony as punishments with the goals of returning prisoners to military duty at the end of their sentences and preventing re offenses 69 Belknap approved the board s recommendations and requested Congress incorporate the British system into the U S military 69 and also requested that funding for the new program be paid for by having soldiers forfeit their pay during the time of their incarceration 69 New Orleans 1872 street riot edit During Reconstruction Grant enforced civil and voting rights for African Americans in the South using the army and newly created Justice Department to destroy the Ku Klux Klan in 1871 under the Enforcement Acts Louisiana during Reconstruction was one of the most politically turbulent violent and disputed states Rival political factions fought for power in the state government and white insurgents frequently attacked freedmen and their sympathizers requiring the deployment of federal troops to keep peace 70 During January 1872 the War Department was kept on high alert concerned with the potential for violent confrontation in New Orleans between Gov Henry Clay Warmoth s faction and that of George W Carter former speaker of the Louisiana House 71 Warmoth supported social equality and voting rights for African Americans but southern conservatives considered him a corrupt northern carpetbagger 72 To prevent disorder Major General William H Emory Louisville District Commander in charge of New Orleans decided that federal troops were needed to prevent violence 73 Belknap informed General in Chief William T Sherman supporting Emory s request 73 On January 5 federal troops were deployed in New Orleans to prevent violence and were intended to occupy the area until January 11 74 Sec Belknap advised President Grant that Emory was the best to make the decision about use of the forces 74 On January 9 a street riot broke out after a Gov Warmoth supporter was assassinated Gov Warmoth s state police retaliated by attacking and dispersing Carter s faction at the Gem Saloon Emory deployed reinforcement troops on January 10 to restore order 75 On January 12 Grant wanting to stay out of state politics told the mayor of New Orleans through the War Department that he would not declare martial law in Louisiana 75 An angry mob of thousands of Carter s men took to the streets Emory deployed troops equipped with Gatling guns 76 Carter s men dispersed believing that Emory would use U S military force to keep the peace 76 On January 15 Grant wrote to Belknap that he desired to prevent the danger of bloodshed without having to take sides with either faction 77 On January 16 Att Gen George H Williams told Gov Warmoth that Grant would take sides only if there was a clear case of legal right and overruling necessity 77 On January 22 learning that Gov Warmoth and Carter had formed rival militias and were preparing for violence President Grant issued orders through the War Department for Emory to use troops if necessary 78 When Emory communicated Grant s message to both Gov Warmoth and Carter they dispersed their factions and kept peace for 10 months 78 Eads Bridge commission 1873 edit nbsp Eads BridgeIn 1873 the construction of the Americas first steel arched bridge named after James B Eads was nearing completion in St Louis 79 Belknap under influence from the Keokuk Packet steamliner company was opposed to its completion He desired that the bridge be torn down so steamers would not have to lower their smokestacks to sail under it 79 Belknap created a commission to make recommendations on either destroying the bridge and rebuilding it with a design that allowed steamers to pass or building a canal around the bridge so that they could pass 79 Eads who was friends with Grant visited Washington D C in November 1873 before Belknap submitted the report to Congress and asked that Grant rescue the bridge from destruction 80 Belknap argued that according to federal law the Secretary of War had the authority to prevent obstruction of the Mississippi River 80 In response Grant reminded Belknap that Congress had authorized the construction of the bridge 80 and that Congress would probably not authorize money to tear it down He overruled Belknap s decision and told Belknap in person You certainly cannot destroy this structure on your own authority General you had better drop this case 81 Belknap was embarrassed stood up blushing bowed to President Grant and left the meeting 81 The Eads Bridge was completed in 1874 and is still in active use today 82 Preserved Mathew Brady Civil War photos 1874 edit In 1872 photographer Mathew Brady went bankrupt his possessions including photographs and negatives were sold to satisfy creditors 83 In 1874 the owner of a warehouse in New York City offered a set of over 2 000 Brady negatives for sale Belknap authorized their purchase for 2 500 84 The negatives were not packed or transported with care and by the time the War Department took possession about one third of them were damaged or destroyed 84 Brady subsequently complained to Belknap that none of the 2 500 had gone to him or any of his creditors 84 During the discussion Brady offered to sell a second set of negatives Congress appropriated up to 25 000 for the purchase and after reviewing the materials and obtaining advice from a War Department attorney as to their value Belknap authorized payment in full 84 As a result of Belknap s initiative the War Department acquired over 6 000 images of the Civil War era including photos of prominent military and government officials battlefields and defensive works 85 This collection was subsequently combined with other collections of Brady photos which were purchased by the federal government they were later catalogued and are maintained by the National Archives and Records Administration and the Library of Congress 86 Yellowstone expedition 1875 edit During the summer of 1875 Belknap decided to explore Yellowstone the nation s first national park created as the result of a law signed by President Grant on March 2 1872 87 Accompanying Belknap were Colonel Randolph B Marcy Lieutenant Colonel James W Forsyth and Chicago businessman William E Strong 87 Leading the expedition was Lieutenant Gustavus C Doane who had led the Washburn Langford Doane Expedition in 1870 the first extensive federal survey of the Yellowstone territory that was responsible in part for the formation of the park 87 88 Doane left Fort Ellis where he was stationed and made preparations for Belknap s party s arrival at Mammoth Hot Springs 89 On July 26 Belknap s party reached Fort Ellis and proceeded to meet Doane 89 Led by Doane Belknap s party attempted to retrace the original 1870 Expedition in addition to hunting for any big game found on the journey 90 Belknap s party included 24 soldiers and two ambulances 91 The two week expedition proved to be troublesome as Doane was unable to find big game to hunt and after briefly viewing the Grand Canyon of Yellowstone Belknap s party had to wait several hours before Doane finally found the trail 90 92 Great Sioux War 1876 edit Further information The Great Sioux War In late July 1874 a U S Army expedition under Col George A Custer discovered gold in the Black Hills 93 Soon many gold miners were trespassing on land granted to the Indians under the 1868 Treaty of Fort Laramie In June 1875 President Grant attempted to resolve the problem by offering Indians 100 000 per year to lease their land or 6 000 000 for the Black Hills 93 The Lakota Sioux under Chief Red Cloud refused since the offer would require the Sioux to be moved to the Indian Territory in Oklahoma On November 3 1875 as the crisis escalated President Grant held a secret meeting at the White House including Belknap Secretary of Interior Zachariah Chandler and general Philip Sheridan Sheridan told Grant that the U S Army was undermanned and the territory involved was vast requiring great numbers of soldiers to enforce the treaty 94 Grant Belknap and Chandler agreed to a plan that would withdraw U S troops from the Black Hills allowing miners to mine on Indian Territory 93 According to historian Jeffrey Ostler the purpose of the troop withdrawal was to start an Indian war 93 On December 3 1875 Chandler ordered all Indians to return to their respected reservations however militant Indians under Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse refused to return By January 1876 4 000 miners illegally occupied Indian land 93 When hostile Indians refused to leave their hunting grounds by the January 31 deadline Chandler turned the Indians over to Belknap s War Department stating the said Indians are hereby turned over to the War Department for such action on the part of the Army as you Belknap may deem proper under the circumstances 95 On February 8 1876 Generals Crook and Terry were ordered to start winter military campaigns against hostile Indians and the Great Sioux War commenced 96 On March 1 1876 Crook in freezing weather marched north from Fort Fetterman near Douglas Wyoming to attack Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse and their Indian followers on the Powder River 97 The following day March 2 Belknap abruptly resigned office over the Fort Sill trader post scandal From March 3 to March 7 the War Department was run ad interim under Secretary of Navy George M Robeson On March 8 1876 Alphonso Taft was appointed by Grant Secretary of War The Great Sioux War ended in April 1877 under President Rutherford B Hayes Corruption resignation and House impeachment 1876 edit Further information Trader post scandal nbsp Democratic Congressman Hiester Clymer investigated Belknap s War Department nbsp Congressman Clymer reads to the House a report recommending impeachment and a resolutionOn February 29 1876 rumors that Belknap was receiving profits from traderships reached Representative Hiester Clymer chairman of the Committee on Expenditures in the Department of War In response Clymer launched an investigation into the War Department Although Clymer and Belknap were friends and had been college roommates Clymer was a racist against black Americans who strongly opposed Republican Reconstruction During Belknap s tenure the Army was used in combination with the Justice Department to prosecute the Ku Klux Klan a policy opposed by most Democrats Caleb P Marsh testified to the Clymer Committee that Belknap had personally taken Fort Sill tradership profit payments as part of the partnership agreement between Marsh and John S Evans On February 29 1876 Belknap and his counsel went before Clymer s committee but Belknap declined to testify 98 On the morning of March 2 Treasury Secretary Benjamin Bristow told President Grant of Belknap s impending impeachment After Grant finished breakfast Secretary Belknap and Secretary Chandler arrived at the White House Belknap was extremely anxious openly wept and confessed to Grant Belknap handed Grant a one sentence resignation letter Grant personally wrote a letter accepting Belknap s resignation which he placed on a White House mantel at 10 20 a m 98 Clymer s committee was informed at 11 00 a m of Belknap s resignation 99 Although Belknap s resignation initially caused commotion among House members it did not prevent action by the Clymer committee The chairman of the House Managers cited authority that as a rule the law does not recognize fractions of a day and the House saw no cause to make an exception in this case 100 43 The committee unanimously passed resolutions to impeach Belknap and drew up five articles of impeachment to be sent to the Senate thus Belknap had both resigned and would be impeached at the same time on March 2 1876 by a unanimous vote of the House of Representatives 101 This was the first of two times in US history that a cabinet secretary was ever impeached The second impeachment happened on Feburary 13 2024 when the house impeached Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas 102 Speaker of the House Michael C Kerr wrote to the Senate that Belknap resigned with intent to evade the proceedings of impeachment against him 101 although within a few years of the 1797 impeachment of Senator Blount a number of officers including several judges had been threatened with impeachment and resigned to avoid it after which the proceedings against them were abandoned 100 39 On March 29 and April 4 1876 George Armstrong Custer testified before the Clymer Committee which continued to gather evidence for the Senate trial Custer s testimony was a national media sensation because he accused both Grant s brother and the Secretary of War of corruption Although Belknap had resigned he had many political allies in Washington D C including Grant Custer had previously arrested Grant s son Fred an Army officer on the charge of drunkenness As the result of that incident and his testimony to the Clymer Committee Custer incurred Grant s displeasure It took more than a month for Custer to resolve the situation and obtain Grant s permission to return to duty leading his regiment in the expedition that would culminate with Custer s death at the Battle of the Little Bighorn Upon Belknap s sudden resignation in March Grant had to hastily ask his secretary of navy George M Robeson to run the War Department ad interim which lasted a week Grant then appointed Alphonso Taft Secretary of War Taft was an attorney and former judge unfamiliar with military matters he reluctantly agreed to serve in order to stabilize the War Department and Grant promised to nominate him later for another more suitable position In May Grant kept his word when he created a vacancy in the attorney general s post by naming the incumbent Edwards Pierrepont to serve as Minister to England he then appointed Taft to serve as attorney general and J Donald Cameron to succeed Taft as secretary of war Senate trial house arrest and Senate acquittal edit nbsp Belknap s Senate trial defender Matthew H CarpenterStarting on April 5 1876 Belknap was tried by the Senate with President pro tempore Thomas W Ferry presiding 103 104 For several weeks senators argued over whether the Senate had jurisdiction to put Belknap on trial since he had already resigned office in March 105 Belknap s defense managers argued that the Senate had no jurisdiction 105 the Senate ruled by a vote of 37 29 that it did 105 106 Belknap was charged with five articles of impeachment and the Senate listened to over 40 witnesses 3 With 40 votes needed for conviction 25 senators voted no on each of five counts while the yes votes were 35 36 36 36 and 37 thus acquitting Belknap by failing to reach the required two thirds majority 3 105 107 108 All Senators agreed that Belknap took the money from Marsh but 23 who voted for acquittal believed the Senate did not have jurisdiction 105 107 Grant s speedy acceptance of Belknap s resignation undoubtedly saved him from conviction 107 After the trial Belknap s wife and children traveled extensively in Europe 105 Former senator Matthew H Carpenter of Wisconsin who had defended Belknap at the Senate trial said that Belknap was entirely innocent and that if he outlived Belknap he would clear Belknap s name 109 Carpenter was reelected to the Senate in 1879 but was in ill health he died in February 1881 and never produced any new evidence 109 On March 4 1876 one month prior to his Senate impeachment trial Grant s Attorney General Edwards Pierrepont had Belknap arrested as a foe of the Tweed Ring in New York Pierrepont was seen as a lawyer of integrity and Grant named him as attorney general to promote reform and anti corruption within Grant s administration 110 Grant who as former commanding general put more scrutiny into military matters than presidents usually did had ordered Pierrepont to launch a criminal investigation into Belknap s War department 111 Much to Belknap s anger Pierrepont put an armed guard around his home to ensure he did not attempt to flee 112 In May 1876 Grant named Pierrepont Minister to Britain and appointed his Secretary of War Alphonso Taft to be attorney general 110 Washington D C indictment 1876 1877 edit nbsp Judge MacArthur dismissed Belknap s Washington D C case pressured by Grant and Attorney General Taft After Belknap s Senate acquittal on August 1 the guards around his house were removed he was indicted by a grand jury on the same day and set for trial in the District of Columbia federal court 113 112 However journalists and other observers were of the view that the district courts were unlikely to convict given the number of Grant administration officials who had been accused of corruption and received little or no punishment 113 Belknap remained angry at Pierrepont and threatened to sue him for false imprisonment 112 On February 2 1877 Belknap visited Grant and pleaded for his indictment to be dismissed 110 The next day Grant asked his cabinet for advice 110 Secretary of State Hamilton Fish was furious at Belknap and wanted him to be tried 110 Grant decided otherwise and wrote to Taft that the district attorney should be directed to dismiss the case 110 Following Grant s instructions Taft told Washington D C District Attorney Henry H Wells that the evidence against Belknap would not sustain a conviction and that Belknap had suffered enough during the Senate trial 110 114 Wells moved for dismissal on February 8 1877 Belknap s case indictment No 11 262 was dismissed by Justice Arthur MacArthur Sr 114 No longer facing the possibility of conviction and imprisonment Belknap decided not to follow through on his threat to sue Pierrepont 112 Later career edit nbsp 1880 Puck CartoonHaving been disgraced by the Senate trial Belknap sought to escape from the scrutiny and disapproval of Washington society by moving to Philadelphia 115 The Belknaps remained married Amanda and the children visited the Catskills Coney Island and other resorts and Belknap saw them periodically 115 Belknap later resided in Keokuk where he practiced law that largely involved representing railroads 116 Although he was no longer involved in politics or government Belknap often returned to Washington to represent clients and maintained a residence and office there 116 Years after his impeachment Belknap s reputation publicly still remained damaged by corruption charges 117 During the 1880 presidential race he was among those lampooned in a Puck magazine cartoon Grant the Acrobat by Joseph Ferdinand Keppler opposing Ulysses S Grant s bid for a third term 118 One historian L D Ingersoll however defended Belknap in 1880 saying General Belknap came out of the terrible ordeal with troops of friends still standing behind him notably old army comrades in the army and those who were especially familiar with his conduct of the general affairs of the War Department These with many public men of the highest standing insist that he is a much abused man 119 Belknap remained popular among his fellow Civil War veterans in 1887 Belknap coauthored the book History of the Fifteenth Regiment Iowa Veteran Volunteer Infantry 115 Death burial and memorial editBelknap died suddenly from a massive heart attack in Washington D C on Sunday October 12 1890 2 The New York Times stated that his death occurred on Sunday between 1 00 a m and 9 00 a m and that he died alone at his residence in the Evans building on New York Avenue 2 120 Prior to his death Belknap had played cards with his friends on Saturday night then retired upstairs for the evening 2 120 Belknap s wife Amanda was in New York City at the time 120 At 8 30 a m on Monday morning Belknap s business associate John W Cameron picked up Belknap s mail on the first floor of Belknap s home where he maintained his law office and proceeded to the second floor where Belknap lived 2 Cameron and a maid found that all the rooms had been locked 2 A janitor was summoned to open the doors and a step ladder was used to peer into Belknap s bedroom 2 Belknap had placed his hat and coat on a chair and his lifeless body was found on his bed 2 His left arm had been raised toward his head with his left hand tightly clenched 2 The bed clothes were disheveled and he appeared to have struggled for breath 2 The physician who initially examined the body stated that he had died of apoplexy however an autopsy by the coroner revealed that Belknap suffered from heart disease 2 121 The War Department was notified and received with genuine sorrow the news of Belknap s death since Belknap had been a popular Secretary of War 120 Belknap was buried in Section 1 at Arlington National Cemetery on October 16 1890 122 The ceremony was conducted by St John s Episcopal Church The site features a granite gravestone with a bronze relief memorial designed by sculptor Carl Rohl Smith 123 The bronze relief 2 ft x 2 ft bust shows Belknap wearing a dress uniform with his hair parted on the right side as well as a long full beard 123 The relief is located on the front of a granite base 6 ft x 5 ft x 5 ft 123 This piece was surveyed by the Smithsonian s Save Outdoor Sculpture survey in 1995 and its condition was described as Treatment being needed 123 The relief is signed by the artist C R 1897 124 nbsp Belknap Gravestone and MemorialFrontA plaque on the front of the granite base is inscribed WILLIAM WORTH BELKNAP BORN 1829 DIED 1890 COLONEL 15TH IOWA VOL INFANTRY BRIGADIER amp BREVET MAJOR GENERAL U S VOLS SECRETARY OF WAR 1869 1876 ERECTED BY HIS COMRADES OF THE CROCKER IOWA BRIGADE 11TH 13TH 15TH AND 16TH IOWA VOL INFANTRY ARMY OF THE TENNESSEE COMPANIONS OF THE MILITARY ORDER OF THE LOYAL LEGION OF THE UNITED STATES AND OTHER FRIENDS 124 Historical reputation editPrior to Belknap s 1876 shocking resignation Belknap s reputation was one of a war hero who honorably served the Union Army 125 There were no rumors of corruption while he served under Johnson as a Treasury collector Even up to 1876 Belknap under Grant was believed to be a faithful judicious Secretary of War publicly recognized for aiding and protecting 100 000 homeless Chicago fire victims In 2003 biographer Edward S Cooper described Belknap as a man of virtues and flaws 126 According to Cooper Belknap willingly turned to graft to support the social ambitions of his wives while living a lavish lifestyle in Washington D C at the expense of soldiers and Indians during the Gilded Age 127 Belknap is positively credited by Cooper for creating and expanding the weather bureau reforming the military justice system and for preserving Mathew Brady s photographic record of the Civil War 126 Belknap s abrupt and controversial resignation in March 1876 caused an unprecedented succession of four Secretaries of War within a 13 month time period Belknap Alphonso Taft J Donald Cameron and George W McCrary In Keokuk Belknap is remembered for being one of its colorful citizens and he has two streets named after him 116 He was commended by his Army colleagues for his coolness under fire during the Civil War but his reputation suffered as the result of his forced resignation as Grant s Secretary of War which took place under a cloud amid suspicions of misconduct 116 nbsp Belknap s home in Keokuk Built 1854Belknap s name resurfaced in January 2021 due to the similarity between Belknap s 1876 impeachment trial and President Donald Trump s 2021 impeachment trial since both had left office by the time the trial had commenced 128 Andra Belknap a Belknap descendant said William Worth Belknap was by many accounts a hero of the Civil War He served the Union Army and during the Battle of Shiloh he was injured and had his horse shot down under him And still he continued in battle During the Battle of Atlanta he personally took a Confederate officer prisoner supposedly dragging the man by the collar across the battlefield His Civil War heroism however has been largely forgotten by history even forgotten by his own family His impeachment is what remains in the history books 125 Legacy editA collection of his family s records and papers and several boxes of letters received by Belknap are located at Princeton University where he was a member of the class of 1848 129 His son Hugh R Belknap served as a U S congressman from Illinois 5 List of Indian campaigns battles and wars involving the United States editYavapai Wars 1861 1875 Comanche Campaign 1867 1875 Battle of Summit Springs 1869 Marias Massacre 1870 Camp Grant massacre 1871 Modoc War 1872 1873 Battle of Salt River Canyon 1872 Battle of Turret Peak 1873 Red River War 1874 1875 Second Battle of Adobe Walls 1874 Battle of the Upper Washita River 1874 Battle of Palo Duro Canyon 1874 Battle of Sunset Pass 1874 Battle of Snake Mountain 1874 Las Cuevas War 1875 Great Sioux War 1876 1877 Note Although the Great Sioux War began in February 1876 under Belknap s tenure no significant battles were fought between the beginning of the war and up to his sudden resignation in March The war lasting until April 1877 took place under five cabinet secretaries Four under President Grant Belknap George M Robeson ad interum Alphonso Taft and J Donald Cameron and one under President Rutherford B Hayes George W McCrary See also edit nbsp American Civil War portalList of American Civil War generals Union Gen William Worth Belknap House listed on the National Register of Historic Places in IowaNotes edit a b c Dictionary of American Biography 1936 William Worth Belknap a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Belknap s Sudden Death New York Times October 14 1890 a b c d Glass 2017 a b c Gen Belknap s Career a b Representative William Worth Belknap The Iowa Legislature William Worth Belknap The Iowa Legislature 2 5 6 Ingersoll 1880 p 566 Cooper 2003 p 61 a b c d e Koster 2010 pp 59 60 The History of Lee County Iowa Containing a History of the County Its Cities Towns Etc Western Historical Company January 1 1879 via Internet Archive alice belknap marriage Grimmett Richard F January 1 2009 St John s Church Lafayette Square The History and Heritage of the Church of the Presidents Washington D C Hillcrest Publishing Group ISBN 97 81934248539 via Google Books Form An Illustrated Weekly Pub Every Sat in the Interests of American Society at Home and Abroad Miss Belknap s Engagement Chicago Tribune October 25 1896 p 1 The Capital Capital Publishing Company January 1 1897 via Google Books The Capital Capital Publishing Company January 1 1898 via Google Books Cooper 2003 p 58 Beaman D C 1905 The Battle or Athens Missouri The Annals of Iowa 3 University of Iowa 6 8 590 593 doi 10 17077 0003 4827 3095 a b c Roster and Record of Iowa Soldiers in the War of the Rebellion Together with Historical Sketches of Volunteer Organizations 1861 1866 9th 16th Regiments Infantry Vol II Des Moines Emory H English State Printer E D Chassell State Binder 1908 p 895 via the Wayback Machine Belknap William W Civil War Soldiers National Park Service Retrieved February 11 2024 Cooper 2003 pp 64 65 a b c d e f g h i j k Ingersoll 1880 pp 566 577 War of the Rebellion A Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies Prepared under the direction of the Secretary of War by Bvt Lieut Col Robert N Scott Third U S Artillery and Published Pursuant to Act of Congress approved June 16 1880 1 Vol 10 Washington D C Government Printing Office 1881 p 289 via the Wayback Machine nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Bonekemper 2012 pp 59 63 64 Smith 2001 p 206 a b c d e f Belknap Tyler 1887 p 609 White 2016 p 243 Miller 2019 p xii Chernow 2017 p 236 Kountz John S 1901 Record of the Organizations Engaged in the Campaign Siege and Defense of Vicksburg p 35 Retrieved April 12 2021 a b c d e Severance 2012 Portraits of Conflict A Photographic History of Alabama in the Civil War p 213 Belknap Tyler 1887 p 24 W H Chamberlin Hood s Second Sortie at Atlanta in Johnson Robert Underwood and Buel Clarence Clough edd Battles and Leaders of the Civil War Vol IV p 331 ISBN 0 89009 572 8 Ingersoll 1880 p 568 a b c William W Belknap Iowa Historical Record Vol I III Iowa City IA Iowa State Historical Society July 1 1885 p 99 via Google Books a b c Koster 2010 p 59 a b c Smith 2001 pp 542 543 a b Chernow 2017 pp 669 670 Bell 1981 p 78 a b Donovan 2008 pp 104 105 Simon 2003 The Papers of Ulysses S Grant Vol 5 1874 Smith 2001 p 543 Calculate Duration Between Two Dates timeanddate com a b c d e f g Bell 1981 p 8 a b Forty First Congress Statutes At Large pp 319 320 Koster pp 59 60 a b c d White 2016 p 564 Koster pp 58 59 Behncke amp Bloomfield 2020 pp 181 182 a b c Koster p 58 Hofling 1981 p 30 a b c d A Sad Week For The Capital a b c d e McFeely 1981 p 58 a b c d e f g White 2016 p 565 a b c Purcell 2008 a b Brands 2012 p 560 a b c Lamphier 2003 p 144 a b c d e f McFeely 1981 pp 150 151 Doukas 2003 p 80 McFeely 1981 p 375 McFeely 1981 p 377 McFeely 1981 pp 377 378 a b c d McFeely 1981 p 378 McFeely 1981 pp 375 376 a b McFeely 1981 p 379 New York Times August 23 1873 The Military Academy Report of the Board of West Point Visitors Cowan s June 24 2009 West Point Superintendent Thomas H Ruger Archive Archived 2010 09 23 at the Wayback Machine Belknap Nov 17 1871 Frohne s Historic Military dead link Art of the Possible Online July 3 2009 James Webster Smith and Henry O Flipper Archived November 23 2011 at the Wayback Machine Reading Eagle Armies First Black Cadet Gets Bars 123 Years Later p A13 a b c d New York Times October 11 1871 The Ruined City a b c d e f New York Times December 4 1871 Coakley 1988 pp 316 317 Coakley 1988 pp 317 318 Hogue 2006 Uncivil War pp 58 59 a b Dawson 1982 pp 117 118 a b Coakley 1988 pp 318 319 a b Coakley 1988 p 319 a b Coakley 1988 pp 319 320 a b Coakley 1988 p 320 a b Coakley 1988 pp 321 322 a b c Stevens 2008 pp 99 100 a b c Stevens 2008 pp 100 101 a b Stevens 2008 pp 101 102 Eads Bridge infosite en structurae de accessed June 19 2015 Wilson Robert 2013 Mathew Brady Portraits of a Nation New York Bloomsbury Publishing Company pp 210 211 ISBN 978 1 62040 203 0 a b c d Mathew Brady Portraits of a Nation Mathew Brady Photographs of Civil War Era Personalities and Scenes Record Group 111 Records of the Office of the Chief Signal Officer 1860 1985 National Archives and Records Administration Retrieved January 10 2017 Mathew Brady Photographs of Civil War Era Personalities and Scenes a b c Scott 2007 p 105 Cambell 1909 p 72 a b Scott 2007 pp 105 106 a b Bonney Orrin H 1970 Battle Drums and Geysers The Life And Journals Of Lt Gustavus Cheyney Doane Soldier And Explorer Of The Yellowstone And Snake River Regions Chicago Swallow Press pp 47 50 Scott 2007 p 106 Scott 2007 pp 106 107 a b c d e Jeffrey Ostler 2004 The Plains Sioux and U S Colonialism from Lewis and Clark to Wounded Knee pp 60 62 Smith 2001 pp 538 Secretary of the Interior to the Secretary of War February 1 1876 National Archives Colonel Drum to Gen Terry and Gen Crook February 8 1876 National Archives Collins Jr Charles D Atlas of the Sioux Wars Second edition Fort Leavenworth Kansas Combat Studies Institute Press 2006 Map 14 15 a b McFeely 1981 Grant p 433 McFeely 1981 Grant p 434 a b Hinds Precedents Volume 3 Chapter 63 Nature of Impeachment Accused may be tried after resignation 2007 Retrieved March 3 2021 a b Hinds Precedents House votes to impeach DHS Secretary Mayorkas over border crisis Fox News February 13 2024 Craig Bryan January 9 2020 Resignation was Not the End Miller Center Charlottesville VA University of Virginia Retrieved January 14 2021 Koenig Louis W December 1965 From Failing Hands The Story of Presidential Succession By John D Feerick New York Fordham University Press 1965 Pp 368 6 95 American Political Science Review 59 4 1035 doi 10 1017 s0003055400133027 ISSN 0003 0554 S2CID 147181749 a b c d e f Purcell 2008 p 34 Hinds Precedents p 934 a b c McFeely 1974 p 152 Lord Moses H Rept 44 791 Report of the House managers of the impeachment of W W Belknap late Secretary of War August 2 1876 Laid on the table and ordered to be printed U S Government Printing Office Retrieved June 17 2023 a b Biographical Dictionary of America 1906 p 280 a b c d e f g Cooper 2003 p 311 Smith 2001 pp 543 595 a b c d Cooper 2003 p 310 a b New York Times August 2 2012 Acquittal of Belknap a b New York Times The Suit Against Gen Belknap a b c Cooper 2003 William Worth Belknap An American Disgrace pp 312 313 a b c d Sloat 2017 A Model Grant Procession A Forecast of the Campaign for Empire in 1884 The Boston Globe Boston MA October 13 1880 p 5 via Newspapers com Nowlan Robert A 2016 The American Presidents From Polk to Hayes Denver Outskirts Press Inc p 498 ISBN 978 1 4787 6572 1 Ingersoll 1880 pp 569 571 a b c d The Milwaukee Journal Dying A Solitary Death Spokane Falls Review Death Of General Belknap Burial Detail Belknap William Worth Section 1 Grave 132 ANC Explorer Arlington National Cemetery Retrieved December 19 2020 a b c d William Worth Belknap Monument Sculpture National Portrait Gallery Washington DC Smithsonian Institution Retrieved January 14 2021 a b Smithsonian 1995 William Worth Belknap Monument sculpture Save Outdoor Sculpture Smithsonian Retrieved December 31 2010 a b Belknap 2021 a b Cooper 2003 William Worth Belknap An American Disgrace p 13 Cooper 2003 William Worth Belknap An American Disgrace pp 12 13 Gaard 2021 William W Belknap Papers Princeton University Retrieved February 12 2024 Sources editBooks edit Behncke Ted Bloomfield Gary 2020 Custer Philadelphia amp Oxford Casemate ISBN 978 1 61200 889 9 Belknap William W Tyler Loren S 1887 William W Belknap ed History of the Fifteenth Regiment Iowa Veteran Volunteer Infantry Keokuk Iowa R B Ogden amp Son Print Brands H W 2012 The Man Who Saved the Union Ulysses S Grant in War and Peace New York Doubleday ISBN 978 0 385 53241 9 Bonekemper Edward H 2012 Grant and Lee Washington DC Regnery History ISBN 978 1 62157 010 3 Cooper Edward S 2003 William Worth Belknap an American Disgrace Cranbury New Jersey Rosemont Publishing amp Printing Corp ISBN 0 8386 3990 9 Chernow Ron 2017 Grant New York Penguin Press ISBN 978 1 5942 0487 6 Coakley Robert W 1988 Davis S Trask ed The Role of Federal Military Forces in Domestic Disorders 1789 1878 Army Historical Series Washington D C Center of Military History United States Army Dawson III Joseph G 1982 Army Generals and Reconstruction Louisiana 1862 1877 Louisiana State University Louisiana State University Press ISBN 978 0 8071 1960 0 Donovan James 2008 A Terrible Glory Custer and the Little Bighorn New York City Little Brown and Company ISBN 978 0 316 15578 6 Hinds Asher C 1907 Hinds Precedents of the House of Representatives of the United States Vol III Washington D C US Government Printing Office pp 903 903 922 934 Hofling Charles K 1981 Custer and the Little Big Horn A Psychobiographical Inquiry Detroit Wayne State University Press ISBN 0 8143 1814 2 Ingersoll L D 1880 A History of the War Department of the United States Washington D C Francis B Mohun pp 566 571 Lamphier Peg A 2003 Kate Chase and William Sprague Politics and Gender in a Civil War Marriage Lincoln Nebraska University of Nebraska Press ISBN 0 8032 2947 X McFeely William S 1981 Grant A Biography New York City W W Norton amp Company LTD ISBN 0 393 01372 3 Miller Donald L 2019 Vicksburg Grant s Campaign That Broke the Confederacy Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 1 4516 4137 0 Purcell L Edward 2008 David Hudson Marvin Bergman Loren Horton eds The Biographical Dictionary of Iowa Iowa City University of Iowa Press pp 33 34 ISBN 978 1 58729 685 7 Smith Jean Edward 2001 Grant New York City Simon amp Schuster ISBN 0 684 84927 5 White Ronald C 2016 American Ulysses A Life of Ulysses S Grant Random House Publishing Group ISBN 978 1 5883 6992 5 Articles edit Koster John June 2010 The Belknap Scandal Fulcrum to Disaster Wild West 58 64 Newspapers edit Belknap s Sudden Death PDF New York Times October 14 1890 Retrieved March 20 2012 Gen Belknap s Career PDF New York Times March 3 1876 A Sad Week For The Capital PDF New York Times March 6 1876 Sloat Jerry January 26 2017 Belknap was one of Keokuk s colorful citizens Fort Madison Daily Democrat Fort Madison Iowa The War Department Annual Report of the Secretary of War on the Operations of the Department for the Year 1871 PDF New York Times New York December 4 1871 Dictionaries edit Rossiter Johnson ed 1906 Biographical Dictionary of America Belknap William Worth Boston American Biographical Society pp 280 281 Dictionary of American Biography William Worth Belknap New York City Charles Scribner s Sons 1936 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Belknap William Worth Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 3 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 684 Internet edit Glass Andrew May 5 2017 Senate holds former war secretary s impeachment trial May 4 1876 politico com Belknap Andra January 14 2021 Congress impeached and tried my ancestor after he left office Trump could be next USA Today Retrieved May 23 2021 Gaard Tom January 23 2021 Trump impeachment resurfaces Iowan William Belknap s roller coaster 19th century story Des Moines Register Retrieved May 14 2021 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to William Worth Belknap Federal Impeachment William W Belknap Library of Congress Research Guides Belknap biography Archived June 8 2010 at the Wayback Machine history army mil William Worth Belknap at ArlingtonCemetery net April 5 2023 Unofficial website Political officesPreceded byJohn Aaron Rawlins United States Secretary of War1869 1876 Succeeded byAlphonso TaftIowa House of RepresentativesPreceded byDistrict Established Member of the Iowa House of Representatives from District 54 Keokuk 1858 1860 Succeeded byGeorge William Reddick Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title William W Belknap amp oldid 1207631546, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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