Ulysses S. Grant was
the 18th president of the United States, a Union
general, and the commander of the Union army during the final
year of the Civil War. He was born in Point Pleasant, Ohio, to
Hannah Simpson Grant and Jesse Grant, and spent his boyhood in
Georgetown, Ohio, where his father ran a tanning business.
Young Grant attended the U.S. Military Academy at West Point,
graduating in 1843 near the middle of his class. At this point,
Grant did not want a military career, but an education, followed
by a college professorship. Instead, he was sent to Jefferson
Barracks, near St. Louis, Missouri. He saw duty in the
Mexican-American War (1846-1848) under the command of General
Zachary Taylor and General Winfield Scott. During the war,
Grant was twice promoted in recognition of his bravery and
talented leadership. The war with Mexico proved to be a
training ground for him as well as other future Civil War
officers.
After the war, Grant was stationed at Sacketts Harbor, New
York, Detroit, Michigan, and Fort Vancouver, Washington. At
Fort Vancouver, dearly missing his wife and bored by the
monotonous duty, he began drinking. He resigned his commission
in 1854 and returned to Missouri where he unsuccessfully tried
his hand at farming and real estate before moving to Galena,
Illinois, to work in his father’s tannery.
At the beginning of the Civil War, Grant was appointed
commander of the 21st Illinois Regiment and saw
service fighting Confederate guerrillas in Missouri. In August
1861, he was appointed brigadier general of volunteers by
President Lincoln. He quickly led his troops to capture
Paducah, Kentucky, but had to retreat after a Confederate
counterassault at Belmont, Missouri. In February 1862 Grant
captured Forts Donelson and Henry in Tennessee, handing the
Union its first major victories and earning himself national
recognition and a promotion to major general.
In October 1862, he was named commander of the Department of
Tennessee and placed in charge of the Vicksburg, Mississippi,
campaign. The surrender of Vicksburg on July 4, 1863 was one of
the turning points of the Civil War. In March 1864, Grant was
promoted to lieutenant general and commander of all Union
armies. Giving the Confederates no rest, Grant pressed Robert
E. Lee throughout Virginia, while Union General Sherman advanced
through Atlanta to the Atlantic. Finally on April 9, 1865 Lee
surrendered to Grant at Appomattox, ending the Civil War.
In July 1866, Grant received the rank of full General of the
Army, the first American to hold that distinction since George
Washington. His postwar duties included overseeing Indian
Affairs and protection of the transcontinental railroad workers
in the west and the enforcement of Reconstruction policies in
the South. Although he had doubts about Andrew Johnson’s
Reconstruction policies, he accompanied the President on his
infamous “swing ‘round the circle” during the 1866 campaign.
Grant became an integral part of the battle between Congress
and the White House over control of Reconstruction policy. In
August 1867 Johnson suspended Secretary of War Edwin Stanton,
who had been working with the Radical Republicans in Congress
against Johnson, and appointed Grant as Stanton’s ad interim
replacement. The general was uncomfortable being placed in that
awkward position, but he dutifully served for five months. When
the Senate refused to consent to Stanton’s removal, Grant
resigned. Thereafter, Grant sided with the Radical Republicans
and supported Johnson’s impeachment after the president violated
the Tenure of Office Act in 1868.
Although previously a nominal Democrat, Grant became the
Republican presidential nominee in 1868. He easily defeated his
Democratic challenger, Horatio Seymour, and was soundly
reelected in 1872, running against maverick newspaper editor
Horace Greeley. The Grant presidency had some successes, such
as the Treaty of Washington (1871), but is mainly remembered for
a series of scandals—Credit Mobilier, the Sanborn contracts, the
Whiskey Ring, and the Belknap bribery. Other important events
during his tenure include the ratification of the Fifteenth
Amendment, the Panic of 1873, and the Resumption of Specie Act
(1875).
When he left office, Grant embarked on a triumphant two-year
world tour. In 1880, he was the leading candidate for the
Republican presidential nomination. After leading on 35
ballots, he finally lost to James Garfield, a compromise
candidate, thus ending his hopes for a third term. In 1881, he
moved to New York City and invested in a brokerage firm run by
his son, Ulysses S. Grant Jr., and Ferdinand Ward. The firm
went bankrupt in 1884, and Ward was incarcerated for illegal
business practices. Left virtually penniless, and battling
terminal cancer, Grant supported himself and his family through
a cash advance on his autobiography, provided by Mark Twain’s
publishing firm of Webster and Company. Completed shortly
before his death in July 1885, Grant’s Personal Memoirs
are well respected for both content and literary style. |