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Zachary Taylorwas
a popular hero of the Mexican War, the first career soldier to attain the
Presidency and the first United States president elected after the Mexican War.
After 40 years in the army, he became the first man to occupy the nation's
highest office without previous political experience. The biggest problem he
faced was how to organize the large Southwest territory acquired from Mexico.
Amid a national crisis between the North and the South over the territory,
Taylor was an able and respected military commander. He wore a simple, informal
uniform and in combat often exposed himself to enemy fire. His stocky build and
stout endurance led his men to nickname him Old Rough and Ready. While he was
adequate, Taylor was by no means a brilliant general. Taylor reached the
Presidency with no political aspiration or preparation. It is a matter of
speculation as to whether continuation of his hard line policy toward the South
would have prevented the American Civil War.
Born in Orange County, Virginia on November 24, 1784, Taylor was the third
of nine children of Richard and Sarah Strother Taylor. Both of his parents were
of leading families in Virginia. His father Richard was an army officer who had
served with George Washington in the
American Revolution. Zachary's family moved from Virginia to northern Kentucky
in Jefferson County just a few months after his birth and he was raised on a
plantation. Taylor had only little formal education that he received from a
private tutor since there were no schools in the area. He was a career officer
in the Army, but thought mostly of raising cotton. As a youngster, Zachary's
father regaled him with stories of he and his comrades from the days of the
American Revolution. When grown he joined the army, but Zachary however, always
kept his interest in farming. He married Margaret (Peggy) Mackall Smith of
Maryland in 1810 and had four children; one daughter would become the first wife
of Jefferson Davis, later Confederate president; a son became a Confederate
general.
In 1808 Zachary joined the army an infantry officer. Over the course of
the next 40 years, he served at many frontier posts. During the War of 1812, he
distinguished himself under William Henry Harrison. He also served in the Indian
Wars in the Old Northwest Territory and
Florida as well as in the Mexican War. Dignitaries who served under Taylor
included Abraham Lincoln in the Black Hawk
War, and Ulysses S. Grant and Jefferson
Davis in the Mexican War. In 1837 during the Second Seminole War, he was
credited with the defeat of the Seminole Indians in the Battle of Lake
Okeechobee. This action earned him a promotion to the rank of Brigadier General.
It was through his actions in these battles that he earned the nickname "Old
Rough and Ready". His participation in the Mexican War made him a
national hero and his 40 years in the Army made him a strong nationalist.
Late 1847 saw the return of Taylor to his Baton Rouge, Louisiana
plantation. It was being suggested that he become a candidate for president.
However, he was cool to this idea. As time wore on, he stated that he would not
actively seek the office but would accept the nomination if it were to be
offered. . His popularity as a military hero enabled him to overtake Henry
Clay, Senator from Kentucky and win the Whig nomination for the presidency
in 1848. Millard Fillmore was chosen as his
running mate. Taylor had little political experience, having never previously
bothered to vote. He declared himself non-partisan and would not commit himself
to troublesome issues. Being a slave owner lured the southern vote and his
military record appealed to the northerners. As "Old Rough and
Ready", his homespun ways were his political assets. In the November
election, a three-way contest between himself, Democrat Lewis Cass, and Free
Soiler Martin Van Buren, Taylor polled 163
electoral votes to Cass's 127. He carried eight slave states and seven free
states, winning 15 of the then 30 states. The Free Soiler Party's Van Buren
failed to win an electoral vote.
President Zachary Taylor's greatest achievement during his administration
was in foreign affairs. John M. Clayton, Secretary of State, arranged in 1850
the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty with Great Britain. This was in an effort to end
British encroachments in Central America and paved the way for the building of
the Panama Canal over a half-century later.
With the breach between free and slave states widening, Taylor, a
slaveholder himself, opposed the unrestricted expansion of slavery. Taylor
favored granting immediate statehood to California and New Mexico, but when
California prohibited slavery, the South opposed its admission to the Union.
Taylor refused to reconsider and took a firm stand against Southern threats of
secession from the Union. Resisting Henry Clay's compromise proposals made in an
effort to settle the differences between the North and the South, President
Taylor declared that he was ready to use force to prevent secession. This stand
alienated southern Whigs and contributed to an impasse and the greatest debate
in Senate history. President Taylor favored changes in the original resolutions,
but died before such amendments could be made. His death removed the principal
obstacle to the passage two months later of Clay's proposals, the Compromise
Measures of 1850. The war Taylor had been most willing to face came 11 years
later.
After ceremonies to lay the cornerstone of the Washington Monument on July
4, 1850, Taylor became sick from the heat with cholera and died five days later
on July 9, 1850. He was the second President to die while in office. Zachary
Taylor was buried near Louisville, Kentucky in what is now Zachary Taylor
National Cemetery.
TAYLOR, Zachary, twelfth
president of the United States under the US Constitution, born in Orange county,
Virginia, 24 September, 1784; died in the executive mansion, Washington, D. C.,
9 July, 1850. His father, Colonel Richard Taylor, an officer in the war of the
Revolution, was conspicuous for zeal and daring among men in whom personal
gallantry was the rule. After the war he retired to private life, and in 1785
removed to Kentucky, then a sparsely occupied county of Virginia, and made his
home near the present city of Louisville, where he died.
Zachary was the third son. Brought up on a farm in a new settlement, he had
few scholastic opportunities; but in the thrift, industry, self-denial, and
forethought required by the circumstances, he learned such lessons as were well
adapted to form the character illustrated by his eventful career. Yet he had
also another form of education. The liberal grants of land that Virginia made to
her soldiers caused many of them, after the peace of 1783, to remove to the
west; thus Colonel Taylor's neighbors included many who had been his
fellow-soldiers, and these often met around his wide hearth. Their conversation
would naturally be reminiscences of their military life, and all the sons of
Colonel Taylor, save one, Hancock, entered the United States army. The rapid
extension of settlements on the border was productive of frequent collision with
the Indians, and required the protection of a military force In 1808, on the
recommendation of President Jefferson,
congress authorized the raising of five regiments of infantry, one of riflemen,
one of light artillery, and one of light dragoons. From the terms of the act it
was understood that this was Dot to be a permanent increase of the United States
army, and many of the officers of the " old army" declined to
seek promotion in the new regiments. At this period questions had arisen between
the United States and Great Britain which caused serious anticipations of a war
with that power, and led many to regard the additional force authorized as a
preliminary step in preparation for such a war. Zachary Taylor, then in his
twenty-fourth year, applied for a commission and was appointed a 1st lieutenant
in the 7th infantry, one of the new regiments, and in 1810 was promoted to the
grade of captain in the same regiment, according to the regulations of the
service. He was happily married in 1810 to Miss Margaret Smith, of Calvert
county, Maryland, who shared with him the privations and dangers of his many
years of frontier service, and survived him but a short time. The troubles on
the frontier continued to increase until 1811, when General William
H. Harrison, afterward president of the United States, marched against the
stronghold of the Shawnees and fought the battle of Tippecanoe.
In June, 1812, war was declared against England,
and this increased the widespread and not unfounded fears of Indian invasion in
the valley of the Wabash. To protect Vincennes from sudden assault, Captain
Taylor was ordered to Fort Harrison, a stockade on the river above Vincennes,
and with his company of infantry, about fifty strong, made preparations to
defend the place. He had not long to wait. A large body of Indians, knowing the
smallness of the garrison, came, confidently counting on its capture ; but as it
is a rule in their warfare to seek by strataGeneral to avoid equal risk and
probable loss, they tried various expedients, which were foiled by the judgment,
vigilance, and courage of the commander, and when the final attack was made, the
brave little garrison repelled it with such loss to the assailants that when, in
the following October, General Hopkins came to support Fort Harrison, no Indians
were to be found thereabout. For the defense of Fort Harrison, Captain Taylor
received the brevet of major, an honor that had seldom, if ever before, been
conferred for service in Indian war. In the following November, Major Taylor,
with a battalion of regulars, formed a part of the command of General Hopkins in
the expedition against the hostile Indians at the head-waters of the Wabash. In
1814, with his separate command, he being then a major by commission, he made a
campaign against the hostile Indians and their British allies on Rock river,
which was so successful as to give subsequent security to that immediate
frontier. In such service, not the less hazardous or indicative of merit because
on a small scale, he passed the period of his employment on that frontier until
the treaty of peace with Great Britain disposed the Indians to be quiet.
After the war, 3 March, 1815, a law was enacted to fix the military peace
establishment of the United States. By this act the whole force was to be
reduced to 10,000 men, with such proportions of artillery, infantry, and
riflemen as the president should judge proper. The president was to cause the
officers and men of the existing army to be arranged, by unrestricted transfers,
so as to form the corps authorized by the recent act, and the supernumeraries
were to be discharged. Major Taylor had borne the responsibilities and performed
the duties of a battalion commander so long and successfully that when the
arranging board reduced him to the rank of captain in the new organization he
felt the injustice, but resigned from the army without complaint, returned home,
and proceeded, as he said in after-years, "to make a crop of corn."
Influences that were certainly not employed by him, and are unknown to the
writer of this sketch, caused his restoration to the grade of major, and he
resumed his place in the army, there to continue until the voice of the people
called him to the highest office within their gift. Under the rules that
governed promotion in the army, Major Taylor became lieutenant-colonel of the
1st infantry, and commanded at Fort Snelling, then the advanced post in the
northwest.
In 1832 he became colonel of the 1st infantry, with headquarters at Fort
Crawford, Prairie du Chien. The barracks were unfinished, and his practical mind
and conscientious attention to every duty were manifest in the progress and
completion of the work. The second Black Hawk campaign occurred this year, and
Colonel Taylor, with the greater part of his regiment, joined the army commanded
by General Henry Atkinson, and with it moved from Rock Island up the valley of
Rock river, following Black Hawk, who had gone to make a junction with the
Pottawattamie band of the Prophet, a nephew of Black Hawk. This was in violation
of the treaty he had made with General Edmund P. Gaines in 1831, by which he was
required to remove to the west of the Mississippi, relinquishing all claim to
the Rock river villages. It was assumed that his purpose in returning to the
east side of the river was hostile, and, from the defenseless condition of the
settlers and the horror of savage atrocity, great excitement was created, due
rather to his fame as a warrior than to the number of his followers. If, as he
subsequently declared, his design was to go and live peaceably with his nephew,
the Prophet, rather than with the Foxes, of whom Keokuk was the chief, that
design may have been frustrated by the lamentable mistake of some mounted
volunteers in hastening forward in pursuit of Black Hawk, who, with his
band--men, women, and children--was going up on the south side of the Rock
river." The pursuers fell into an ambuscade, and were routed with some loss
and in great confusion. The event will be remembered by the men of that day as "Stillman's
run."
Zachary Taylor Sketch at lake Okee-cho-bee
The vanity of the young Indians was inflated by their success, as was shown
by some exultant messages; and the sagacious old chief, whatever he may have
previously calculated upon, now saw that war was inevitable and immediate. With
his band recruited by warriors from the Prophet's band, he crossed to the north
side of Rock river, and, passing through the swamp Koshkenong, fled over the
prairies west of the Four Lakes, toward Wisconsin river. General Henry Dodge,
with a battalion of mounted miners, overtook the Indians while they were
crossing the Wisconsin and attacked their rear-guard, which, when the main body
had crossed, swam the river and joined the retreat over the Kickapoo hills
toward the Mississippi. General Atkinson, with his whole army, continued the
pursuit, and, after a toilsome march, overtook the Indians north of Prairie du
Chien, on the bank of the Mississippi, to the west side of which they were
preparing to cross in bark canoes made on the spot. That purpose was foiled by
the accidental arrival of a steamboat with a small gun on board. The Indians
took cover in a willow marsh, and there was fought the battle of the Bad Axe.
The Indians were defeated, and dispersed, and the campaign ended. In the mean
time, General Winfield Scott, with troops from the east, took chief command and
established his headquarters at Rock Island, and thither General Atkinson went
with the regular troops, except that part of the 1st infantry which constituted
the garrison of Fort Crawford.
With these Colonel Taylor returned to Prairie du Chien. When it was reported
that the Indians were on an island above the prairie, he sent a lieutenant with
an appropriate command to explore the island, where unmistakable evidence was
found of the recent presence of the Indians and of their departure. Immediately
thereafter a group of Indians appeared on the east bank of the river under a
white flag, who proved to be Black Hawk, with a remnant of his band and a few
friendly Winnebagoes. The lieutenant went with them to the fort, where Colonel
Taylor received them, except the Winnebagoes, as prisoners. A lieutenant and a
guard were sent with them, sixty in number--men, women, and children--by
steamboat, to Rock Island, there to report to General Scott for orders in regard
to the prisoners. Colonel Taylor actively participated in the campaign up to its
close, and to him was surrendered the chief who had most illustrated the warlike
instincts of the Indian race, to whom history must fairly accord the credit of
having done much under the most disadvantageous circumstances. In 1836 Colonel
Taylor was ordered to Florida for service in the Seminole war, and the next year
he defeated the Indians in the decisive battle of Okechobee, for which he
received the brevet of brigadier-general, and in 1838 was appointed to the chief
command in Florida. In 1840 he was assigned to command the southern division of
the western department of the army. Though General Taylor had for many years
been a cotton-planter, his family had lived with him at his military station,
but, when ordered for an indefinite time on field service, he made his family
home at Baton Rouge, Louisiana.
Texas having been annexed to the United States in 1845, Mexico threatened to
invade Texas with the avowed purpose to recover the territory, and General
Taylor was ordered to defend it as a part of the United States. He proceeded
with all his available force, about 1,500 men, to Corpus Christi, where he was
joined by re-enforcements of regulars and volunteers. Discussion had arisen as
to whether the Nueces or the Rio Grande was the proper boundary of Texas. His
political opinions, whatever they might be, were subordinate to the duty of a
soldier to execute the orders of his government, and, without uttering it, he
acted on the apophthegmatic of Decatur: " My country, right or wrong, my
country." Texas claimed protection for her frontier, the president
recognized the fact that Texas had been admitted to the Union with the Rio
Grande as her boundary, and General Taylor was instructed to advance to that
river. His force had been increased to about 4,000, when. on 8 March, 1846, he
marched front Corpus Christi. He was of course conscious of the inadequacy of
his division to resist such an army as Mexico might send against it, but when
ordered by superior authority it was not his to remonstrate. General Gaines,
commanding the western department, had made requisitions for a sufficient number
of volunteers to join Taylor, but the secretary of war countermanded them,
except as to such as had already joined.
General Taylor, with a main depot at Point Isabel, advanced to the bank of
the Rio Grande, opposite to Matamoras, and there made provision for defense of
the place called Fort Brown. Soon after his arrival, Ampudia, the Mexican
general at Matamoras, made a threatening demand that General Taylor should
withdraw his troops beyond the Nueces, to which he replied that his position had
been taken by order of his government, and would be maintained. Having completed
the entrenchment, and being short of supplies, he left a garrison to hold it,
and marched with an aggregate force of 2,288 men to obtain additional supplies
from Point Isabel, about thirty miles distant. General Arista, the new Mexican
commander, availing himself of the opportunity to interpose, crossed the river
below Fort Brown with a force estimated at 6,000 regular troops, 10 pieces of
artillery, and a considerable amount of auxiliaries.
In the afternoon of the second day's march from Point Isabel these were
reported by General Taylor's cavalry to be in his front, and he halted to allow
the command to rest and for the needful dispositions for battle. In the evening
a request was made that a council of war should be held, to which General Taylor
assented. The prevalent opinion was in favor of falling back to Point Isabel,
there to entrench and wait for re-enforcements. After listening to a full
expression of views, the general announced: "I shall go to Fort Brown or
stay in my shoes," a western expression equivalent to "or die
in the attempt." He then notified the officers to prepare to attack the
enemy at dawn of day.
In the morning of 8 May the advance was made by columns until the enemy's
batteries opened, when line of battle was formed and Taylor's artillery,
inferior in number but otherwise superior, was brought fully into action and
soon dispersed the mass of the enemy's cavalry. The chaparral, dense copses of
thorn-bushes, served both to conceal the position of the enemy and to impede the
movements of the attacking force. The action closed at night, when the enemy
retired, and General Taylor bivouacked on the field. Early in the morning of 9
May he resumed his march, and in the afternoon encountered General Arista in a
strong position with artillery advantageously posted. Taylor's infantry pushed
through the chaparral lining both sides of the road, and drove the enemy's
infantry before them; but the batteries held their position, and were so fatally
used that it was an absolute necessity to capture them. For this purpose the
general ordered a squadron of dragoons to charge them. The enemy's gunners were
cut down at their pieces, the commanding officer was captured, and the infantry
soon made the victory complete. The Mexican loss in the two battles was
estimated at a thousand ; the American, killed, forty-nine. The enemy
precipitately re-crossed the Rio Grande, leaving the usual evidence of a routed
army. General Taylor then proceeded to Fort Brown. During his absence it had
been heavily bombarded, and the commander, Major Brown, had been killed. The
Mexicans evacuated Matamoras, and General Taylor took peaceable possession, 18
May.
The Rio Grande, except at time of flood, offered little obstacle to predatory
incursions, and it was obviously sound policy to press the enemy back from the
border. General Taylor, therefore, moved forward to Camargo, on the San Juan, a
tributary of the Rio Grande. This last-named river rose so as to enable
steamboats to transport troops and supplies, and by September a sufficiently
large force of volunteers had reported at General Taylor's headquarters to
justify a further march into the interior, but the move must be by hind, and for
that there was far from adequate transportation. Hiring Mexican packers to
supplement the little transportation on hand, he was able to add one division of
volunteers to the regulars of his command, and with a force of 6,625 men of all
arms he marched against Monterey, a fortified town of great natural strength,
garrisoned by 10,000 men under General Ampudia. On 19 September he encamped
before the town, and on the 2lst began the attack. On the third day General
Ampudia proposed to surrender, commissioners were appointed, and terms of
capitulation agreed upon, by which the enemy were to retire beyond a specified
line, and the United States forces were not to advance beyond that line during
the next eight weeks or until the pleasure of the respective governments should
be known. By some strange misconception, the United States government
disapproved the arrangements, and ordered that the armistice should be
terminated, by which we lost whatever had been gained in the interests of peace
by the generous terms of the capitulation, and got nothing, for, during the
short time that remained unexpired, no provision had been or could be made to
enable General Taylor to advance into the heart of Mexico.
Presuming that such must be the purpose of the government, he assiduously
strove to collect the means for that object. When his preparations were
well-nigh perfected, General Scott was sent to Mexico with orders that enabled
him at discretion to strip General Taylor of both troops and material of war, to
be used on another line of operations. The projected campaign against the
capital of Mexico was to be from Vera Cruz, up the steppes, and against the
fortifications that had been built to resist any probable invasion, instead of
from Saltillo, across the plains to the comparatively undefended capital. The
difficulty on this route was the waterless space to be crossed, and against that
General Taylor had ingeniously provided. According to instructions, he went to
Victoria, Mexico, turned over his troops, except a proper escort to return
through a country of hostiles to Monterey, and then went to Agua Nueva, beyond
Saltillo, where he was joined by General John E. Wool with his command from
Chihuahua.
General Santa-Anna saw the invitation offered by the withdrawal of General
Taylor's troops, and with a well-appointed army, 20,000 strong, marched with the
assurance of easily recovering their lost territory. General Taylor fell back to
the narrow pass in front of the hacienda of Buena Vista, and here stood on the
defensive. His force was 5,400 of all arms ; but of these, only three batteries
of artillery, one squadron of dragoons, one mounted company of Texans, and one
regiment of Mississippi riflemen, had ever been under fire. Some skirmishing
occurred on 22 February, and a general assault along the whole line was made on
the morning of the 23d. The battle, with varying fortune, continued throughout
the day; at evening the enemy retired, and during the night retreated by the
route on which he had advanced, having suffered much by the casualties of
battle, but still more by desertions. So Santa-Anna returned with but a remnant
of the regular army of Mexico, on which reliance had been placed to repel
invasion, and thenceforward peace was undisturbed in the valley of the Rio
Grande. At that time General Taylor's capacity was not justly estimated, his
golden silence being often misunderstood.
His reply to Sec. Marcy's strictures in regard to the capitulation of
Monterey exhibited such vigor of thought and grace of expression that many
attributed it to a member of his staff who had a literary reputation. It was
written by General Taylor's own hand in the open air, by his camp-fire at
Victoria, Mexico. Many years of military routine had not dulled his desire for
knowledge; he had extensively studied both ancient and modern history,
especially the English. Unpretending, meditative, observant, and conclusive, he
was best understood and most appreciated by those who had known him long and
intimately. In a campaign he gathered information from all who approached him,
however sinister their motive might be. By comparison and elimination he gained
a knowledge that was often surprising as to the position and designs of the
enemy. In battle he was vigilantly active, though quiet in bearing; calm and
considerate, though stern and inflexible ; but when the excitement of danger and
strife had subsided, he had a father's tenderness and care for the wounded, and
none more sincerely mourned for those who had bravely fallen in the line of
their duty.
Before his nomination for the presidency General Taylor had no political
aspirations and looked forward to the time when he should retire from the army
as the beginning of a farmer's life. He had planned for his retreat a stock-farm
in the hills of Jefferson county, behind his cotton-plantation on the
Mississippi river. In his case, as in some other notable instances, the fact of
not desiring office rather increased than diminished popular confidence, so that
un-seeking he was sought.
From early manhood he had served continually in the United States army. His
duties had led him to consider the welfare of the country as one and
indivisible, and his opinions were free from party or sectional intensity.
Conscious of his want of knowledge of the machinery of the civil service, he
formed his cabinet to supplement his own information. They were men well known
to the public by the eminent civil stations they had occupied, and were only
thus known to General Taylor, who as president had literally no friends to
reward and no enemies to punish. The cabinet was constituted as follows: John M.
Clayton, of Delaware, secretary of state ; William M. Meredith, of Pennsylvania,
secretary of the treasury; George W. Crawford, of Georgia, secretary of war; W.
Ballard Preston, of Virginia, secretary of the navy ; Rev. Johnson, of Maryland,
attorney-general; Alexander H. H. Stuart, of Virginia, secretary of the
interior.
All these had served in the United States senate or the house of
representatives, and all were lawyers. Taylor was the popular hero of a foreign
war which had been victoriously ended, bringing to the United States a large
acquisition of territory with an alluring harvest of gold, but, all unheeded,
bringing also a large addition to the elements of sectional contention. These
were soon developed, and while the upper air was calm and the sun of prosperity
shone brightly on the land, the attentive listener could hear the rumbling sound
of approaching convulsion. President Taylor, with the keen watchfulness and
intuitive perception that had characterized him as a commander in the field,
easily saw and appreciated the danger; but before it had reached the stage for
official action he died. His party and local relations, being a Whig and a
southern planter, gave him the vantage-ground for the exercise of a restraining
influence in the threatened contest. His views, matured under former
responsibilities, were tersely given to confidential friends, and as none of his
cabinet (except Attorney-General Stuart) survive, their consultations cannot be
learned unless from preserved manuscript. During the brief period of his
administration the rules that would govern it were made manifest, and no law for
civil-service reform was needful for his guidance. With him the bestowal of
office was a trust held for the people: it was not to be gained by proof of
party zeal and labor. The fact of holding Democratic opinions was not a
disqualification for the office. Nepotism had with him no quarter. So strict was
he in this that to be a relative was an obstacle to appointment. General
Winfield Scott related to the writer an anecdote that may appropriately close
this sketch. He said he had remarked to his wife that General Taylor was an
upright man, to which she replied: "He is not"; that he
insisted his long acquaintance should enable him to judge better than she. But
she persisted in her denial, and he asked: "Then what manner of man is
he?" When she responded: "He is a downright man."
As president he had purity, patriotism, and discretion to guide him in his
new field of duty, and had he lived long enough to stamp his character on his
administration, it would have been found that the great soldier was equally
fitted to be the head of a government. General Taylor's life was written by
Joseph R. Fry and Robert T. Conrad (Philadelphia, 1848) and by John Frost (New
York, 1848).
His wife, Margaret Taylor, born in Calvert county, Maryland, about 1790; died
near Pascagoula, Louisiana, 18 August, 1852, was the daughter of Walter Smith, a
Maryland planter. She received a home education, married early in life, and.
until her husband's election to the presidency, resided with him chiefly in
garrisons or on the frontier. During the Florida war she established herself at
Tampa bay, and did good service among the sick and wounded in the hospitals
there. Mrs. Taylor was without social ambition, and when General Taylor became
president she reluctantly accepted her responsibilities, regarding the office as
a "plot to deprive her of her husband's society and to shorten his life
by unnecessary care." She surrendered to her youngest daughter the
superintendence of the household, and took no part in social duties.
--Her eldest daughter, Sarah Taylor, became the wife of Jefferson Davis.
--Another daughter, Elizabeth Taylor, born in 1826, was educated in
Philadelphia, married Major William W. S. Bliss in her nineteenth year, and, on
her father's inauguration, became mistress of the White House. Mrs. Bliss, or
Miss Betty, as she was popularly called, was a graceful and accomplished
hostess, and, it is said, "did the honors of the establishment with the
artlessness of a rustic belle and the grace of a duchess." After the
death of her father in 1850, and her husband in 1853, she spent several years in
retirement, subsequently marrying Philip Dandridge, of Winchester. Va., whom she
survives.
-His only son, Richard Taylor, soldier, born in New Orleans, 27 January,
1826; died in New York city, 12 April. 1879, was sent to Edinburgh, Scotland,
when thirteen years old, where he spent three years in studying the classics,
and then a year in France. He entered the junior class at Yale in 1843, and was
graduated there in 1845. He was a wide and voracious though a desultory reader.
From college he went to his father's camp on the Rio Grande, and he was present
at Palo Alto, and Resaca de la Palma. His health then became impaired, and he
returned home. He resided on a cotton-plantation in Jefferson county,
Mississippi, until 1849, when he removed to a sugar-estate in St. Charles
parish, Louisiana, about twenty miles above New Orleans, where he was residing
when the civil war began. He was in the state senate from 1856 to 1860, was a
delegate to the Charleston Democratic convention in 1860, and afterward to that
at Baltimore, and was a member of the Secession convention of Louisiana. As a
member of the military committee, he aided the governor in organizing troops,
and in June, 1861, went to Virginia as colonel of the 9th Louisiana volunteers.
The day he reached Richmond he left for Manassas, arriving there at dusk on the
day of the battle. In the autumn he was made a brigadier-general, and in the
spring of 1862 he led his brigade in the valley campaign under "
Stonewall" Jackson. He distinguished himself at Front Royal,
Middletown, Winchester, Strasburg, Cross Keys, and Port Republic, and Jackson
recommended him for promotion. Taylor was also with Jackson in the seven days'
battles before Richmond. He was promoted to major-general, and assigned to the
command of Louisiana.
The fatigues and exposures of his campaigns there brought on a partial and
temporary paralysis of the lower limbs; but in August he assumed command. Tile
only communication across the Mississippi retained by the Confederates was
between Vicksburg and Port Hudson ; but Taylor showed great ability in raising,
organizing, supplying, and handling an army, and he gradually won back the state
west of the Mississippi from the National forces. He had reclaimed the whole of
this when Vicksburg fell, 4 July, 1863, and was then compelled to fall back west
of Berwick's bay. General Taylor's principal achievement during the war was his
defeat of General Nathaniel P. Banks at Sabine Cross-Roads, near Mansfield, De
Soto parish, Louisiana, 8 April, 1864. With 8,000 men he attacked the advance of
the northern army and routed it, capturing twenty-two guns and a large number of
prisoners. He followed Banks, who fell back to Pleasant hill, and on the next
day again attacked him, when Taylor was defeated, losing the fruits of the first
day's victory. These two days' fighting have been frequently compared to that of
Shiloh--a surprise and defeat on the first day, followed by a substantial
victory of the National forces on the second. In the summer of 1864 Taylor was
promoted to be a lieutenant-general, and ordered to the command of the
Department of Alabama, Mississippi, etc. Here he was able merely to protract the
contest, while the great armies decided it. After Lee and Johnston capitulated
there was nothing for him, and he surrendered to General Edward R. S. Canby, at
Citronelle, 8 May, 1865. The war left Taylor ruined in fortune, and he soon went
abroad. Returning home, he took part in politics as an adviser, and his counsel
was held in special esteem by Samuel J. Tilden in his presidential canvass.
During this period he wrote his memoir of the war, entitled "Destruction
and Reconstruction" (New York, 1879).
His brother, Joseph Pannel Taylor, soldier, born near Louisville, Kentucky, 4
May, 1796 ; died in Washington, D. C., 29 June, 1864, served in the ranks on the
Canadian frontier during the war of 1812, was appointed a lieutenant of United
States infantry on 20 May, 1813, served through the war with Great Britain, and
was retained on the peace establishment as lieutenant of artillery, becoming a
captain in July, 1825. He was appointed commissary of subsistence in 1829, and
thenceforth served in that department, becoming assistant commissary-general,
with the rank of lieutenant-colonel, in 1841. On 30 May, 1848, he was brevetted
colonel for his services in prosecuting the war with Mexico, during which he was
chief commissary of the army on the upper line of operations. In September,
1861, he was made colonel and commissary-general, and on 9 February, 1863, was
promoted brigadier-general. His wife was a daughter of Justice John McLean.
Their son, John McLean Taylor, soldier, born in Washington, D. C., 21
November, 1828; died in Baltimore, Maryland, 21 November, 1875, entered the
United States army as 2d lieutenant in the 3d artillery on 3 March, 1848, and
was promoted 1st lieutenant on 30 June, 1851, and captain and commissary of
subsistence on 11 May, 1851. He served faithfully in his department during the
civil war, becoming major on 9 February, 1863, and receiving the brevets of
lieutenant-colonel and colonel to date from 13 March, 1865.-
Another son, Joseph Hancock Taylor, soldier, born in Kentucky, 26 January,
1836; died in Omaha, Nebraska, 13 March, 1885, was graduated at the United
States military academy in 1856, and commissioned 2d lieutenant of cavalry on 16
January, 185'7. He served in Kansas, in the Utah expedition, and in a campaign
in 1860 against the Kiowa and Comanche Indians of Colorado. He was promoted 1st
lieutenant on 22 April, 1861, and captain on 14 May, and was appointed acting
adjutant-general of General Edwin V. Sumner's division on 27 November, 1861.
During the peninsula campaign, and subsequently in the Maryland campaign, he
served as acting assistant adjutant-general of the 2d corps, winning the brevet
of major at Fair Oaks, and that of lieutenant-colonel at the Antietam. He was
assistant adjutant-general at Fredericksburg, and assistant inspector-general of
cavalry in Stoneman's raid. On 1 June, 1863, he was assigned to duty as
assistant adjutant-general of the department at Washington. He was appointed a
major on the staff on 30 March, 1866, and on 13 August was brevetted colonel for
faithful services during the war. He was on duty in different military
departments till his death, which was due to disease that he had contracted in
the line of duty.
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