James Blair Steedman (July
29, 1817 – October 18, 1883) was an American
soldier,
printer, and politician. He also served during the American Civil War as a general in the Union
Army, most noted for his performances at the Battle of
Chickamauga
in 1863 and the Battle of Nashville in
1864.
Early life and career
Steedman
was born in Northumberland County,
Pennsylvania
, in the summer of 1817, the second out of five
children. Steedman would not receive any formal education
while growing up.
He was fifteen years old when both of his
parents died, and to support his siblings he worked as a typesetter
for the Lewisburg Democrat newspaper in Lewisburg
. Two years later he moved to Louisville,
Kentucky
, and found work there again as a typesetter for the
Louisville Journal. He was employed as a printer
until joining the
Republic of
Texas Army of
Sam Houston in
1835.
After
fighting in the Texas War of
Independence, Steedman returned to home to Pennsylvania
, where he worked on a public works project as a
supervisor. In 1835 Steedman moved to Ohio, desiring to
become a public works contractor, but failed initially to find work
for his firm.
He decided to return to his newspaper roots
and bought a printing press in the city of Napoleon
in Henry County, Ohio
, where he began publishing the Northwest
Democrat newspaper in 1838. Also during this time he
married Miranda Slides, and contracts for public works began to
come in. Steedman prospered as a contractor, his firm building
early parts of both the
Wabash and
Erie Canal and the
Toledo, Wabash
and Western Railway.
Steedman began his career in politics in 1847, serving two terms in
the
Ohio General Assembly.
Afterwards he worked as a railroad conductor and then to went to
California in 1849, prospecting
for gold. In 1850 he returned to Ohio, and was on the state's board
for public works from 1852 to 1857, three out of those four years
serving as its president.
Also during this time he was admitted to the
state's Bar association and then
established a law practice in Toledo
.
Steedman became an editor of the
North-Western Democrat and
Toledo Times newspaper and a
major general of the 5th
Division in the Ohio State
Militia in 1857, holding both positions
until the beginning of the American Civil War in 1861. From 1856 to
1860 he also worked as a printer to the
United States Congress.
In 1860
Steedman was part of Ohio's delegation to the Democratic National
Convention when it met in Charleston, South Carolina
, and was an active supporter of Stephen Douglas in Baltimore,
Maryland
. Also in 1860, he campaigned unsuccessfully
for election to the
U.S. House of
Representatives for the district of Toledo.
Civil War service
Steedman as a brigadier general
At the start of the American Civil War in 1861, Steedman chose to
follow the
Union cause
and volunteered in the
United States
Army. He raised and was elected
colonel of the
14th Ohio Infantry Regiment on April 27. The 14th Ohio was initially a
ninety-day unit, but was re-organized that fall by Steedman when
their enlistments were up. Steedman was mustered out of the
volunteer service on August 13, and was appointed a
regular army colonel of the 14th Ohio on
September 1, shortly after the regiment re-enlisted for three
years.
Steedman and the 14th first saw action in
June during the Union victory at the Battle of
Philippi
in Barcour County, Virginia
(now part of West Virginia
.)
Steedman and his regiment were then sent to serve in the
Western Theater.
They took
part in Union victory during the Battle of Mill Springs
near modern day Nancy, Kentucky
, in January 1862. The 14th Ohio also
participated in the Siege of Corinth
at Corinth, Mississippi
, in late April and early June. Steedman was
promoted to the rank of
brigadier general on July
17, 1862, and given
brigade command in the
Army of the Ohio.
Following
the Union victory at the Battle of Shiloh
in April 1862, Steedman and his brigade were sent
to join Maj. Gen.
Don Carlos
Buell's army in Kentucky
that fall. During the Battle of
Perryville
on October 8, his brigade reinforced Brig.
Gen. Rasseau's division, timely filling a gap in the Union line and
saving the division from being pushed from the field. Steedman
would receive a high commendation from Buell in his official report
of the battle.
Steedman
and his brigade fought during the Battle of Stones River
in December 1862 and into January 1863, with his
command a part of Brig. Gen.
Speed
S. Fry's division of the re-named
Army of the Cumberland, now
under the command of Maj. Gen.
William S. Rosecrans
Chickamauga
Attacks at Chickamauga on September 20, 1863
During
the Battle of Chickamauga in Tennessee
in the fall of 1863, Steedman led the vanguard of
Union Maj. Gen.
Gordon
Granger's Reserve
Corps to Maj. Gen.
George Henry Thomas' aid on
September 20. From his position north of the battlefield at
MacAfee's Church, Granger heard the sounds of the fight to the
south.
Without orders from Rosecrans, Granger sent
Steedman's brigade to support Thomas' last-ditch defensive effort
as the rest of Rosecrans' defeated army raced for Chattanooga,
Tennessee
.
Steedman moved quickly and arrived about 2:30 p.m., just in time to
stop Confederate
Lt. Gen. James
Longstreet's attempt to turn Thomas's right. Steedman is
credited with "performing the most conspicuous act of personal
courage recorded by any army officer during the Battle of
Chickamauga" and preventing Rosecrans' defeat turning into a Union
"disaster."Military historian Ezra J. Warner stated that "His
heroism was virtually the salvation of the Union forces left on the
field" at Chickamauga.During the fight, Steedman was wounded when
his horse was shot and killed under him.
In late
1863, Steedman participated in the Siege of Chattanooga
, as well as the Third Battle
of Chattanooga
from November 23–25. He remained in
Chattanooga, commanding all forces there until May 1864, during
which he was promoted to the rank of
major general on April 20.
Steedman
also participated in much of the Atlanta Campaign
, and then commanded the District of Etowah in the
Department of the
Cumberland from June 15 to November 29, and again from January
5, 1865.
Nashville
Attacks at Nashville on December 16, 1864
In between his stints of district command, Steedman fought with
Thomas' army during the Battle of Nashville on December 15–16,
1864. At Nashville Steedman led a "provisional" division consisting
of 11 regiments on the Union left. He had arrived over two days
from Chattanooga by rail with about 6,000 men, a collection of his
own brigade plus men returning from furlough but belonging to other
units.
Steedman would be the only non-West
Point
graduate of Thomas' six chief commanders at
Nashville.
A few days before the battle, Thomas found a telegram addressed to
Ulysses S. Grant, now commander of all U.S. Army
forces, written by Maj. Gen.
John
Schofield, one of his subordinates. In it Schofield complained
of Thomas' slowness at attacking the Army of Tennessee, something
Grant had prodded Thomas about repeatedly. Thomas turned to
Steedman, who was with him at the time, and asked "Steedman, can it
be possible that Schofield would send such a telegram?" to which he
replied the commanding general must be able to recognize
Schofield's handwriting. Thomas admitted he could and asked "Why
does he send such telegrams?" Steedman smiled at his commander's
innocence and replied "General Thomas, who is next in command to
you in case of removal?" referring to Schofield. After a brief
pause Thomas let out a quiet "Oh, I see."
Thomas ordered Steedman and his three-brigade division to make a
diversionary attack at 6 a.m. on December 15, thereby keeping the
Confederate
Army of Tennessee's
right (the corps of
Maj. Gen. Benjamin F. Cheatham) occupied all day and
preventing them from aiding against the main assault elsewhere. The
orders were later modified to say if his diversion could be made
into a successful attack, then Steedman should do so. On December
16, Thomas ordered an attack by the corps of Maj. Gen.
Thomas J. Wood
(along with Steedman's men) against the right of the Army of
Tennessee, now held by Maj. Gen.
Stephen
D. Lee's corps. At noon the
attack was begun, but initially was without success. Steedman's men
took heavy losses in the first assaults this day, including one of
his regiments, the
13th USCT Infantry, losing 221 men,
the most of any regiment that day, Union or Confederate. When the
rest of Thomas' force finally broke through Cheatham's men on the
left as well as the Confederate center at 4 p.m., Wood and Steedman
renewed their attack and helped the rest of Thomas' army
overwhelmed Lee's corps, driving it from the field.
After the Battle of Nashville, Steedman returned to Etowah until he
was given command of the Department of Georgia, an assignment
lasting from June 27 to December 10, 1865. He remained in the Army
after the end of the American Civil War until resigning on August
18, 1866.
Postbellum
After resigning his commission from the U.S. Army, Steedman
returned home to Ohio in 1866. During the administration of
U.S. President Andrew Johnson, he was the collector of
internal revenue at New Orleans,
Louisiana
, until 1869. He again returned to Toledo,
became the editor of the town's
Northern Ohio Democrat
newspaper, and in 1870 he was elected to the
Ohio State Senate.
In May 1883 he was appointed the Chief of Police in Toledo, a post
he held until his death. Steedman died in Toledo, and is buried
there in Woodlawn Cemetery.
See also
References
- Print
- Eicher, John H., and Eicher, David
J., Civil War High Commands, Stanford Univ. Press,
2001, ISBN 0-8047-3641-3.
- Foote, Shelby, The Civil War: A Narrative:
Vol. III Red River to Appomattox, Vintage Books,
1986, ISBN 0-394-74622-8.
- Warner, Ezra J., Generals in Blue: Lives of the Union
Commanders, Louisiana State University Press, 1964, ISBN
0-8071-0822-7.
- Online
Notes
- Eicher, p. 507.
- Warner, p. 473.
- In the context of the U.S. Civil War, provisional units were
"on the fly" or quickly put together groupings of soldiers,
brigades and divisions often made in haste prior to or during
battle. These were most commonly temporary commands only.
- Foote, p. 681.
- Foote, p. 686
- Foote, p. 963.
- Foote, p. 690.
- Foote, p. 700. In Thomas Wood's report of these attacks he
stated: "After the repulse, our soldiers, white and colored, lay
indiscriminately near the enemy works at the outer edge of the
abatis."
- Foote, pp.701-03.
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