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Winfield Scott Hancock, Major General
U.S.A.
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Winfield Scott Hancock, along with his twin brother,
Hilary were born on February 14, 1824 at Montgomery Square, Pennsylvania
to Benjamin and Elisabeth Hancock. When Winfield was six years
old, his father moved the family to Norristown, Pennsylvania
where he began a law practice. At age sixteen, Winfield entered
the Military Academy at West Point on July 1, 1840 and on July
1, 1844 he graduated 25 in his class.
When the War with Mexico began, Hancock was assigned
to the quartermaster department but did not go to Mexico until
1847. |
Upon the end of the war in 1848, Hancock and his
regiment, the 6th United States Infantry, remained for sometime
in Mexico City where he met a young Virginian by the name of
Henry Heth. Hancock and Heth became close friends and when the
6th U.S. Infantry was transferred to Jefferson Barracks, in St.
Louis Missouri, Heth was instrumental in introducing Hancock
to Almira Russell, who Winfield married on January 24, 1850.
At the outbreak of the Civil War in 1861, Hancock
was stationed in Los Angeles, California. Obtaining permission
to leave his quartermaster duties, Hancock headed East to offer
his services in the defense of the Union. Arriving in the City
of Washington in September, Hancock was summoned to the Headquarters
of Major General George B. McClellan. McClellan appointed Hancock,
Brigadier General Of Volunteers on September 23, 1861. Hancocks
first action was during McClellans Peninsula Campaign,
where he commanded a brigade at the Battle of Williamsburg on
May 5, 1862. McClellan, in a letter to his wife after the battle,
stated that "Hancock was superb yesterday."
From that letter the sobriquet of "Hancock the Superb"
was born.
Hancocks military career was on the rise
and he would be called upon to command some of the most difficult
tasks that the Army of the Potomac would offer. At the Battle
of Antietam, September 17, 1862, Hancock would assume command
of the 1st Division of the II Corps at the Sunken Road (Bloody
Lane). Promoted to Major General on November 29, 1862, Hancock
led his division during the Battle of Fredericksburg and attacked
the Confederate position along the Stone Wall at the foot of
Maryes Heights. May 3, 1863, Hancock and his Division served
as the armys rearguard as it crossed back over the Rappahannock
River at the Battle of Chancellorsville. After the resignation
of Darius N. Couch, May 22, 1863, Hancock assumes command of
the II Corps and had little time to acquaint himself with his
new command when orders came for the Army of the Potomac to proceed
North, in pursuit of the Confederate Army of Northern Virginia.
By July 1, 1863, Hancock and his II Corps were in Maryland
when Major General George Gordon Meade, now commanding the Army
of the Potomac, came to Hancock requesting him to go to Gettysburg,
Pennsylvania and "take command of the Corps there."
At 3:30 PM, on July 1, 1863, Hancock arrived at
East Cemetery Hill, just outside of Gettysburg, Pennsylvania
and found the commander of the Union XI Corps, Major General
Oliver Otis Howard, attempting to establish a defensive position.
Hancock offered to show Howard the orders from Meade giving him
command of the field but Howard did not wish to see them and
told Hancock to "go ahead." Hancock then went
to work establishing the Union battle line that would be known
as the "Fish Hook.". For the next two days, Winfield
Scott Hancock would play a significant role in the fighting at
Gettysburg. On the second day of battle, Hancock sent the 1st
Division of his II Corps to repair the damage to the Union left,
caused when Major General Dan Sickles attempted to moved his
III Corps forward into the Peach Orchard. Sickles action
exposed the left flank of the army just as Confederate General
Longstreet launched his attack towards the Round Tops. On the
third day, General Meade had placed Hancock in command of the
I and III Corps along with his own II Corps. Hancock was now
commanding three fifths of the Army of the Potomac at Gettysburg
when "Picketts Charge" took place on July 3,
1863. During the Confederate artillery bombardment, that preceded
"Picketts Charge," Hancock rode along his line
encouraging his men to hold their ground. A soldier who witnessed
Hancock that day stated "his daring heroism and splendid
presence gave the men new courage." Upon conclusion
of the bombardment, the Confederate infantry assault began. Hancock
was not idle during the attack and seemed to be everywhere on
the battlefield directing regiments and brigades into the fight.
As Hancock was approaching the Vermont Brigade commanded by Brigadier
General George J. Stannard, he suddenly reeled in his saddle
and began to fall to the ground. Two of Stannards officers
sprang forward and caught Hancock as he fell, a bullet had torn
through Hancocks saddle and penetrated eight inches into
his right groin. Refusing to be moved from the field, though
in much pain, Hancock continued to direct and encourage his men.
Upon the repulse of the Confederate attack, Hancock was removed
from the field and taken to a field hospital. Eventually he would
be taken to his fathers home in Norristown, Pennsylvania
to recover. The Battle of Gettysburg was over and the Union victory
would prove to be the result of the leadership of Major General
Winfield Scott Hancock. On April 21, 1866, Hancock would receive
the thanks of Congress for his "skill and heroic
valor" during the Battle of Gettysburg.
Hancock returned to the Army of the Potomac in
time for the 1864 campaign that would culminate in the ten month
siege of Petersburg, Virginia. During that campaign, He would
command his II Corps at the battles of the Wilderness, Spotsylvania
Court House, North Anna River, Cold Harbor,Deep Bottom, Reams
Station and the Boydton Plank Road. However, as a result of his
Gettysburg wound, that continued to plague him, he would relinquish
command of the II Corps on November 26, 1864. In April 1865,
Hancock was summonsed to Washington to take charge of carrying
out the orders of execution on the "Lincoln Conspirators."
In 1867, Hancock would create controversy as commander of the
5th Military District of Louisiana and Texas when he issued General
Order No. 40, returning civil law back to the people of those
southern states.
By 1880, Hancock was the military commander of
the Department of the Atlantic with his headquarters at Governors
Island, located in New York Harbor. On June 24, 1880,
Winfield Scott Hancock received the Democratic nomination for
President of the United States but lost the election to James
Garfield by only a small margin. During the election, Hancock
was the first Northerner, since the war, to carry the Southern
states in a Presidential election.
Upon the death of Ulysses S. Grant, Hancock was
ordered by President Grover Cleveland, on August 8, 1885, to
supervise and direct the funeral of the former President and
General of the United States Army in New York City. This would
be Winfield Scott Hancocks last public appearance.
Major General Winfield Scott Hancock would end
his life still on active duty at Governors Island, New
York. He died on February 9, 1886 at 2:35 PM as a result of advanced
diabetes, which was also the cause of his fathers death
in 1867. After a brief funeral service at Trinity Church, in
New York City, General Hancocks remains were taken to his
boyhood home of Norristown, Pennsylvania, where he was placed,
alongside his daughter, Ada, in a mausoleum that he had designed
in Montgomery Cemetery.
The history of Major General Winfield Scott Hancock
is a story of an American hero who was dedicated to the Union
and the United States. "Hancock the Superb, Thunderbolt
of the Army of the Potomac," all are names that described
his skill and valor during the Civil War but, perhaps the phrase
used by former President Rutherford B. Hayes, upon Hancocks
death, sums up the life of the "Hero of Gettysburg,"
best when he said of him that " he was through and
through pure gold."
§ THE W.S. HANCOCK SOCIETY
1939 West Marshall St.
NORRISTOWN, PA 19403
www.wshancocksociety.org
e-mail:
WSHancockSoc@msn.com |