THIS DAY IN HISTORY – Thomas J. “Stonewall” Jackson dies – 1863

Via History.com

The South loses one of its boldest and most colorful generals on this day, when 39-year-old Thomas J. “Stonewall” Jackson dies of pneumonia a week after his own troops accidentally fired on him during the Battle of Chancellorsville in Virginia. In the first two years of the war, Jackson terrorized Union commanders and led his army corps on bold and daring marches. He was the perfect complement to Robert E. Lee.

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A native Virginian, Jackson grew up in poverty in Clarksburg, in the mountains of what is now West Virginia. Orphaned at an early age, Jackson was raised by relatives and became a shy, lonely young man. He had only a rudimentary education but secured an appointment to the U.S. Military Academy at West Point after another young man from the same congressional district turned down his appointment. Despite poor preparation, Jackson worked hard and graduated 17th in a class of 59 cadets.

Jackson went on to serve as an artillery officer during the Mexican War (1846-48), seeing action at Vera Cruz and Chapultepec. He earned three brevets for bravery in just six months and left the service in 1850 to teach at Virginia Military Institute (VMI). He was known as a difficult and eccentric classroom instructor, prone to strange and impromptu gestures in class. He was also a devout Presbyterian who refused to even talk of secular matters on the Sabbath. In 1859, Jackson led a group of VMI cadets to serve as gallows guards for the hanging of abolitionist John Brown.

When war broke out in 1861, Jackson became a brigadier general in command of five regiments raised in Virginia’s Shenandoah Valley. At the Battle of Bull Run in July 1861, Jackson earned distinction by leading the attack that secured an advantage for the Confederates. Confederate General Barnard Bee, trying to inspire his troops, exclaimed “there stands Jackson like a stone wall,” and provided one of the most enduring monikers in history.

By 1862, Jackson was recognized as one of the most effective commanders in the Confederate army. Leading his force on one of the most brilliant campaigns in military history during the summer of 1862, Jackson marched around the Shenandoah Valley and held off three Union armies while providing relief for Confederates pinned down on the James Peninsula by George McClellan’s army. He later rejoined the Army of Northern Virginia for the Seven Days battles, and his leadership was stellar at Second Bull Run in August 1862. He soon became Lee’s most trusted corps commander.

The Battle of Chancellorsville was Lee’s and Jackson’s shining moment. Despite the fact that they faced an army twice the size of theirs, Lee daringly split his force and sent Jackson around the Union flank—a move that resulted in perhaps the Army of the Potomac’s most stunning defeat of the war. When nightfall halted the attack, Jackson rode forward to reconnoiter the territory for another assault. But as he and his aides rode back to the lines, a group of Rebels opened fire. Jackson was hit three times, and a Southern bullet shattered his left arm, which had to be amputated the next day. Soon, pneumonia set in, and Jackson began to fade. He died, as he had wished, on the Sabbath, May 10, 1863, with these last words: “Let us cross over the river and rest under the shade of the trees.”

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25 Comments
TJF
TJF
May 10, 2017 8:14 am

The junior high school I attended was named after Stonewall. Clarksburg, WV is about 80 miles west of the school. I wonder if they will erase history and change the name of the school in an effort to paper over the past.

Capn Mike
Capn Mike
  TJF
May 10, 2017 9:27 am

You can bet on it. MLK or something like that.

CCRider
CCRider
May 10, 2017 8:14 am

He was an amazing general, no doubt about that, but bonkers. He rode with one arm raised for some perceived health benefit as was his custom of constantly sucking on lemons. When told of the battlefield death of an aide he replied “Very commendable”. Antietam was a slaughter pen. The use of shotgun canister muzzle blasts from artillery against charging, massed troops blew bodies apart creating a carpet of unimaginable gore and viscera. After the battle ended Jackson rode through all this and said “He who does not see the hand of God in this is blind, sir, blind”. Insane.

Zarathustra
Zarathustra
  CCRider
May 10, 2017 9:31 am

He probably had PTSD and it just fucked with his head.

Not Sure
Not Sure
May 10, 2017 8:18 am

As I was born and raised in PA, I learned about the “Civil War”, but as I did field service around the country and especially the south, I learned of another view, or, the “war of Northern aggression”.
It was an eye opening moment for me to see the war from the other side and helped me to learn not to jump to conclusions about the justifications of why we fight.

It is a shame to see all things confederate and the heritage of a people being taken down in the name of political correctness. It is a great time period to study; to learn of how the real reasons behind the disagreements between the north and south that predated the war can be shrouded in political posturing and shameless political gain.

Maggie
Maggie
May 10, 2017 8:19 am

I mentioned how awful I find it that protestors have forced the removal of statues commemorating historical figures in New Orleans to my friend here in D.C. She said, very bluntly from accepting the line one must accept when forced to support the revision of history to accommodate those who want the story changed, “Too bad. They lost. Get over it.”

As if a statue honoring someone who fought for an ideal protecting home and family and the rights of people to make their own decisions. In the grand scheme of this thing called America, there no longer seems to be room for different viewpoints on certain issues.

Are there protests planned at Jackson’s statue at VMI? Is that still there?

Hail Bruce Jenner. Long live the Queen.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Maggie
May 10, 2017 7:45 pm

“Too bad. They lost. Get over it.” wonder if she thinks its time to stop pampering the indian on the res too ?

Anonymous VMI alumnus
Anonymous VMI alumnus
  Maggie
May 10, 2017 10:12 pm

Jackson’s statue still guards the main entrance to the VMI barracks. It ain’t going anywhere.

overthecliff
overthecliff
May 10, 2017 10:44 am

Fact: The winner writes the history.

If you don’t like the results, you had better win.

nkit
nkit
May 10, 2017 11:26 am

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Flashman
Flashman
May 10, 2017 12:20 pm

I’m native Virginian, born in Alexandria. My gg grandfather Lt. John Power was with Company G, the 17th Va. Infantry which mustered in and was comprised of men from Alexandria. In the 1880s a statue of a confederate soldier standing, head bowed with hat in hand was placed on Washington Street. The city council currently comprised of a jewess mayor, an effeminate white male and 3 negroes voted last year to have the statue removed. Only the negroes are native. The other 2 are carpet baggers from out of state. Fortunately the Virginia State Assembly saw this sort of PC shit coming and passed a law stating no statue can be removed from a local jurisdiction without approval of the State Assembly. These sonsabitches will NEVER destroy my heritage.

Vodka
Vodka
May 10, 2017 2:07 pm

In the 1950’s, an act of congress declared all Confederate soldiers to be Veterans of the U.S. Armed Forces. Anybody removing their statues should be lynched and shot.

james the deplorable wanderer
james the deplorable wanderer
May 10, 2017 3:36 pm

“I mentioned how awful I find it that protestors have forced the removal of statues commemorating historical figures in New Orleans to my friend here in D.C. She said, very bluntly from accepting the line one must accept when forced to support the revision of history to accommodate those who want the story changed, “Too bad. They lost. Get over it.”

Don’t worry, Maggie; after the Crunch, a lot of Yankee history is going to be rewritten in blood. You can then tell your “friend”, “Too bad. YOU lost. Get over it.”

And then you can enjoy the SOUREST expression on your “friend’s” face….

Flashman
Flashman
  james the deplorable wanderer
May 10, 2017 3:52 pm

I’m an unreconstructed Southerner and I approve this message.

Maggie
Maggie
  james the deplorable wanderer
May 10, 2017 10:28 pm

Don’t get me wrong… My friend is just speaking the tone of the world in which she operates so when she accepts the political revision to go along get along in a world overly concerned with “isms” of all types, I just shrug and tell her I see it differently but have no need to argue. Our 35 years since basic training have been spent on different turf, much as our upbringings were very different with her parents home right on the Chesapeake Bay (a place called the Eastern Shore) smack dab in millionaire acres, while she got to view the farmhouse built in 1921 by my grandfather in which I was born and raised just last summer when she visited me at my log home in the Ozarks.

I don’t think she realized what a country hick farm gal she teamed up with in basic training until she actually saw where I LIVED. She was shocked. But, hey… it supports her claim of being tolerant of those outside her social class. She just didn’t know it.

Ed
Ed
  Maggie
May 10, 2017 10:41 pm

Mags, I don’t have “friends” like that. You might find out someday that you don’t either.

Maggie
Maggie
  Ed
May 10, 2017 10:50 pm

She and I enjoy a special sort of friendship, Ed. Even though she came from old money, her parents suggested the military when her partying at college was her top priority and she coped rather well, even at Lackland with all sorts of riffraff… some worse than I. (I ALWAYS knew she was a rich bitch from Maryland, btw. I didn’t fall of any rutabaga trucks ever.)

I think when the shit hits the fan, she will try like hell to make it out to the Ozarks. And, if she and her family make it? They will be welcome and will get their chore lists. It will be a different world for her daughter… tomorrow I go see her end of semester ballet recital and will be the only one there wearing sneakers, I bet.

Vic
Vic
  Maggie
May 11, 2017 4:09 am

Maggie, I never knew you were in the military.

Maggie
Maggie
  Vic
May 11, 2017 7:43 am

Was. Ten years, then became Mom and decided flying around the globe in jet jammies was for other-mothers. Husband retired from USAF… another AWACer.

Once in a great while, one of my former comrades shows up here and calls me out to say howdy. Cracks me up.

Ed
Ed
  Maggie
May 11, 2017 8:49 am

Her reply about the Confederates was very telling. When the SHTF, she’ll show you what I meant. People like her always do. Good luck.

Maggie
Maggie
  Ed
May 11, 2017 9:27 am

I agree, Ed, on some level. When she visited me last summer, I had zero sense of her looking down at me once she discovered my background she’d never thought to explore all these decades of our adult friendship. Since she visited me out of friendship and the desire to see my new log home and not as a by the way, while we are in bumfuck nowhere can we stop by sort of way, I know her liking for me is genuine. My place is not an estate on the Eastern Shore, but not anything to scoff at either.

I’ve visited her here in the D.C. area many times over the years, having been active duty on trips here or nearby often in the early years after she’d gotten out as soon as she could, realizing being in the Air Force with a bunch of common people was less than desirable. She finished college, taking her lesson from her parents to heart that partying in college was NOT the way to a successful career, and since I worked for a number of government contractors once I’d left the service, I ended up here on business a few times as well. So, her vacation planned with family last summer JUST to see my home and from whence I came gave proof to the idea that a friendship forged over the course of a lifetime has intrinsic value that could quite possibly transcend class and social status.

Dear Stucky (who may or may not be reading here today but is in my thoughts and prayers) says I tell too much detail about myself, sometimes sharing personal details others might gloss over. But, I really hope to be able to show why human interaction is such a powerful thing when willing include the “why” of beliefs for those interested in trying to grasp.

The comment about the Confederacy and the casual dismissal of an entire body of regional belief is indeed telling and I was disappointed that she has accepted the assault on personal liberty so easily in her rise to high-level corporate positions I would never even have interest in achieving. Certainly, she has lost some of the abilities to just enjoy life and not worry about what others think. She may very well disappoint me in the event of a crisis event that sends her to flyover country seeking shelter from the storm. But, I’ve been disappointed a few times in my life and lived through it and most of those folks never put me up in the style she’s managed to lavish on me the last week or so. Like Cinderella at the ball, I shall depart with my fantasy and leave BOTH my slippers behind.

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My prince drives the White 4×4 instead of a pumpkin. The giant Jake is no longer lonely from his brother’s loss… we adopted a rescue Pyr I called Missy and after a month of putting up with her annoying pouncing, he has decided he doesn’t HATE her.

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Houston Davis
Houston Davis
May 10, 2017 11:34 pm

Proud of my ancestors that served under Jackson in the chancellor campain. Part of the vaunted foot calvary that suprised the Xl corp.

Vic
Vic
May 11, 2017 4:13 am

The loss of Jackson meant the loss of the South. My own opinion, of course.
Jackson was a fanatic on religion, mentally. But I think that made him focused and deadly in other things, like war.

Ed
Ed
  Vic
May 11, 2017 8:54 am

Jackson, Lee and Forrest, in that order, appear to be the military geniuses of the Confederate armies. Without Jackson, Lee was doomed to betrayal by the CSA politicians. Forrest was more or less alone in the western theater, with only Mosby, Cleburne and Watie as men of similar ability. Watie was the last Confederate general to surrender.

rhs jr
rhs jr
May 12, 2017 1:52 am

I graduated from Robert E. Lee High School when it was 100% White and a school to be proud of. Today it is 65% Blacks and makes the news for fights in the cafeteria, etc. I wish they would change the name to MLK Prison Prep School.