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Albert Sidney 1803-1862 Johnston

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JOHNSTON, ALBERT SIDNEY (1803-1862), American Confederate general in the Civil War, was born at Washington, Ky., on Feb. 3, 1803. He graduated at West Point in 1826, and served for eight years in the U.S. infantry as a company officer, adjutant and staff officer. In 1834 he resigned his commission, emigrated in 1836 to Texas, then a republic, and joined its army as a private. His rise was very rapid, and before long he was serv ing as commander-in-chief in preference to Gen. Felix Huston, with whom he fought a duel. From 1838 to 1840 he was Texan secretary for war, and in 1839 he led a successful expedition against the Cherokee Indians. From 1840 to the outbreak of the Mexican War he lived in retirement on his farm, but in 1846 he led a regiment of Texan volunteers in the field, and at Monterey, as a staff officer, he had three horses shot under him. In he returned to the U.S. army as major, and in 1855 became colonel of the 2nd U.S. Cavalry (afterwards 5th), in which his lieut. colonel was Robert E. Lee, and his majors were Hardee and Thomas. In 1857 he commanded the expedition sent against the Mormons, and performed his difficult and dangerous mission so successfully that the objects of the expedition were attained with out bloodshed. He was rewarded with the brevet of brigadier general. At the outbreak of the Civil War in 1861 Johnston, then in command of the Pacific department, resigned his commission and made his way to Richmond, where President Jefferson Davis, whom he had known at West Point, at once made him a full gen eral in the Confederate army and assigned him to command the department of Kentucky. Here he had to guard a long and weak line from the Mississippi to the Alleghany mountains, which was dangerously advanced on account of the political necessity of covering friendly country. The first serious advance of the Fed

erals forced him back at once, and he was freely criticized and denounced for what, in ignorance of the facts, the Southern press and people regarded as a weak and irresolute defence. Johnston himself, who had entered upon the Civil War with the reputa tion of being the foremost soldier on either side, bore with forti tude the reproaches of his countrymen, and Davis loyally sup ported his old friend. Johnston then marched to join Beauregard at Corinth, Miss., and with the united forces took the offensive against Grant's army at Pittsburg Landing. The battle of Shiloh (q.v.) took place on April 6 and 7, 1862. The Federals were completely surprised, and Johnston was in the full tide of success when he fell mortally wounded, dying a few minutes afterwards. President Davis said, in his message to the Confederate Congress, "Without doing injustice to the living, it may safely be said that our loss is irreparable," and the subsequent history of the war in the west went far to prove the truth of his eulogy.

His

WILLIAM PRESTON JOHNSTON (1831-99), who served on the staff of Gen. Johnston and subsequently on that of Presi dent Davis, was a distinguished professor and president of Tulane university. His chief work is the Life of General Albert Sidney Johnston (1878), a most valuable and exhaustive biography.

See "The Death of General Albert Sidney Johnston on the Battle field of Shiloh," in Iowa Journal of History and Politics, vol. xvi. p. (1918) ; see also Amory Dwight Mayo, William Preston Johnston's Work for a New South, U.S. Educ. Bur. (19oo).