Lew Wallace
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For the Oregon state senator, see Lew Wallace (politician).
Lewis Wallace (April 10, 1827 – February 15, 1905) was an American lawyer, Union general in the American Civil War, governor of the New Mexico Territory, politician, diplomat, and author from Indiana. Among his novels and biographies, Wallace is best known for his historical adventure story, Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ (1880), a bestselling novel that has been called “the most influential Christian book of the nineteenth century.”[1]
Wallace’s military career included service in the Mexican–American War and the American Civil War. He was appointed Indiana’s adjutant general and commanded the 11th Indiana Infantry Regiment. Wallace, who attained the rank of major general, participated in the Battle of Fort Donelson, the Battle of Shiloh, and the Battle of Monocacy. He also served on the military commission for the trials of the Lincoln assassination conspirators, and presided over the trial of Henry Wirz, the Confederate commandant of the Andersonville prison camp.
Wallace resigned from the U.S. Army in November 1865 and briefly served as a major general in the Mexican army, before returning to the United States. Wallace was appointed governor of the New Mexico Territory (1878–1881) and served as U.S. minister to the Ottoman Empire (1881–1885). Wallace retired to his home in Crawfordsville, Indiana, where he continued to write until his death in 1905.
Contents
- 1Early life and education
- 2Marriage and family
- 3Early law and military career
- 4Civil War service
- 5Political and diplomatic career
- 6Writing career
- 7Later years
- 8Death
- 9Legacy and honors
- 10Popular culture
- 11Published works
- 12See also
- 13References
- 14Bibliography
- 15Further reading
- 16External links
Early life and education[edit]
Lewis “Lew” Wallace was born on April 10, 1827, in Brookville, Indiana. He was the second of four sons born to Esther French Wallace (née Test) and David Wallace.[2] Lew’s father, a graduate of the U.S. Military Academy in West Point, New York,[3] left the military in 1822 and moved to Brookville, where he established a law practice and entered Indiana politics. David served in the Indiana General Assembly and later as the state’s lieutenant governor, and governor, and as a member of Congress.[4][5] Lew Wallace’s maternal grandfather was circuit court judge and Congressman John Test.
In 1832 the family moved to Covington, Indiana, where Lew’s mother died from tuberculosis on July 14, 1834.[6] In December 1836, David married nineteen-year-old Zerelda Gray Sanders Wallace, who later became a prominent suffragist and temperance advocate. In 1837, after David’s election as governor of Indiana, the family moved to Indianapolis.[7][8]
Lew began his formal education at the age of six at a public school in Covington, but he much preferred the outdoors. Wallace had a talent for drawing and loved to read, but he was a discipline problem at school.[9] In 1836, at the age of nine, Lew joined his older brother in Crawfordsville, Indiana, where he briefly attended the preparatory school division of Wabash College, but soon transferred to another school more suitable for his age.[10] In 1840, when Wallace was thirteen, his father sent him to a private academy at Centerville, Indiana, where his teacher encouraged Lew’s natural affinity for writing. Wallace returned to Indianapolis the following year.[11][12]
Sixteen-year-old Lew went out to earn his own wages in 1842, after his father refused to pay for more schooling.[13] Wallace found a job copying records at the Marion County clerk’s office and lived in an Indianapolis boardinghouse.[14] He also joined the Marion Rifles, a local militia unit, and began writing his first novel, The Fair God, but it was not published until 1873.[15] Wallace said in his autobiography that he had never been a member of any organized religion, but he did believe “in the Christian conception of God”.[1][16]
By 1846, at the start of the Mexican–American War, the nineteen-year-old Wallace was studying law at his father’s law office, but left that pursuit to establish a recruiting office for the Marion Volunteers in Indianapolis. He was appointed a second lieutenant, and on June 19, 1846, mustered into military service with the Marion Volunteers (also known as Company H, 1st Indiana Volunteer Infantry).[17] Wallace rose to the position of regimental adjutant and the rank of first lieutenant while serving in the army of Zachary Taylor, but Wallace personally did not participate in combat.[18] Wallace was mustered out of the volunteer service on June 15, 1847,[19] and returned to Indiana, where he intended to practice law.[20] After the war, Wallace and William B. Greer operated a Free Soil newspaper, The Free Soil Banner, in Indianapolis.[21]
Marriage and family[edit]
In 1848 Wallace met Susan Arnold Elston at the Crawfordsville home of Henry Smith Lane, Wallace’s former commander during the Mexican War.[22] Susan was the daughter of Major Isaac Compton Elston, a wealthy Crawfordsville merchant, and Maria Akin Elston, whose family were Quakers from upstate New York.[23] Susan accepted Wallace’s marriage proposal in 1849, and they were married in Crawfordsville on May 6, 1852.[24] The Wallaces had one son, Henry Lane Wallace, who was born on February 17, 1853.[25]
Early law and military career[edit]
Wallace was admitted to the bar in February 1849, and moved from Indianapolis to Covington, Indiana, where he established a law practice. In 1851 Wallace was elected prosecuting attorney of Indiana’s 1st congressional district,[11] but he resigned in 1853 and moved his family to Crawfordsville, in Montgomery County, Indiana. Wallace continued to practice law and was elected as a Democrat to a two-year term in the Indiana Senate in 1856.[26][27][28] From 1849 to 1853, his office was housed in the Fountain County Clerk’s Building.[29]: 8
While living in Crawfordsville, Wallace organized the Crawfordsville Guards Independent Militia, later called the Montgomery Guards. During the winter of 1859–60, after reading about elite units of the French Army in Algeria, Wallace adopted the Zouave uniform and their system of training for the group. The Montgomery Guards would later form the core of his first military command, the 11th Indiana Volunteer Infantry, during the American Civil War.[27][30][31]
Civil War service[edit]
Wallace, a staunch supporter of the Union, became a member of the Republican party,[27] and began his full-time military career soon after the Confederate attack on Fort Sumter, South Carolina, on April 12, 1861. Indiana’s governor, the Republican Oliver P. Morton, asked Wallace to help recruit Indiana volunteers for the Union army.[32] Wallace, who also sought a military command, agreed to become the state’s adjutant general on the condition that he would be given command of a regiment of his choice.[33][34] Indiana’s quota of six regimental units was filled within a week,[35] and Wallace took command of the 11th Indiana Volunteer Infantry Regiment, which was mustered into the Union army on April 25, 1861. Wallace received his formal commission as a colonel in the Union army the following day.[19][28][36]
On June 5, 1861, Wallace went with the 11th Indiana to Cumberland, Maryland, and on June 12, the regiment won a minor battle at Romney, Virginia, (in present-day West Virginia).[28][37][33] The rout boosted morale for Union troops and led to the Confederate evacuation of Harpers Ferry on June 18.[38] On September 3, 1861, Wallace was promoted to brigadier general of U.S. Army volunteers and given command of a brigade.[19]
Forts Henry and Donelson[edit]
Main articles: Battle of Fort Henry and Battle of Fort Donelson
On February 4 and 5, 1862, prior to the advance against Fort Henry, Union troops under the command of Brig. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant and a flotilla of Union ironclads and timberclad gunboats under the command of Flag Officer Andrew Hull Foote made their way toward the Confederate fort along the Tennessee River in western Tennessee. Wallace’s brigade, which was attached to Brig. Gen. Charles F. Smith‘s division, was ordered to occupy Fort Heiman, an uncompleted Confederate fort across the river from Fort Henry. Wallace’s troops secured the deserted fort and watched the Union attack on Fort Henry from their hilltop position. On February 6, after more than an hour of bombardment from the Union gunboats, Confederate Brig. Gen. Lloyd Tilghman, surrendered Fort Henry to Grant.[39]
Map showing Wallace’s counterattack at Fort Donelson (1862)
Grant’s superior, Maj. Gen. Henry W. Halleck, was concerned that Confederate reinforcements would try to retake the two forts when the Union troops moved overland toward Fort Donelson, so Wallace was left in command at Fort Henry to keep the forts secure.[40][41] Displeased to have been left behind,[33] Wallace prepared his troops to move out at a moment’s notice. The order came at midnight on February 13. Wallace arrived along the Cumberland River the following day and was placed in charge of the 3rd Division. Many of the men in the division were untested reinforcements.[42] Wallace’s three brigades took up position in the center of the Union line, facing Fort Donelson.[40]
During the fierce Confederate assault on February 15, and in Grant’s absence from the battlefield, Wallace acted on his own initiative to send Cruft’s brigade to reinforce the beleaguered division of Brig. Gen. John A. McClernand, despite orders from Grant to hold his position and prevent the enemy from escaping and without Grant’s authority to take the offensive.[43][44] With the Confederates continuing to advance, Wallace led a second brigade to the right and engaged the Confederates with infantry and artillery. Wallace’s decision stopped their forward movement and was key in stabilizing a defensive line for the Union troops. After the Confederate assault had been checked, Wallace led a counterattack that regained the lost ground on the Union right.[45] On March 21, 1862, Wallace, McClernand, and C. F. Smith were promoted to major general for their efforts.[46] Wallace, who was age thirty-four at the time of his promotion, became the youngest major general in the Union army.[47]
Shiloh[edit]
Main article: Battle of Shiloh
Map of the Battle of Shiloh, afternoon of April 6, 1862
Wallace’s most controversial command came at the battle of Shiloh, where he continued as the 3rd Division commander under Maj. Gen. Grant.
What was to become a long-standing controversy developed around the contents of Wallace’s written orders on April 6, the 3rd Division’s movements on the first day of battle, and their late arrival on the field.[48] On the second day of battle, Wallace’s division joined reinforcements from Maj. Gen. Don Carlos Buell‘s army to play an important role in the Union victory.[49] Prior to the battle, Wallace’s division had been left in reserve and was encamped near Crump’s Landing. Their orders were to guard the Union’s right flank and cover the road to Bethel Station, Tennessee, where railroad lines led to Corinth, Mississippi, 20 miles (32 km) to the south.[50] To protect the road from Crump’s Landing and Bethel Station, Wallace sent Col. John M. Thayer‘s 2nd Brigade to Stoney Lonesome, 3 miles (4.8 km) west of Crump’s Landing, and the 3rd Brigade, commanded by Col. Charles Whittlesey to Adamsville, 5.5 miles (8.9 km) west of Crump’s Landing. Col. Morgan L. Smith‘s 1st Brigade remained with Wallace at Crump’s Landing, 5 miles (8.0 km) north of Pittsburg Landing, Tennessee.[51]
Between 5 and 6 a.m. on April 6, 1862, Grant’s army at Pittsburg Landing was surprised and nearly routed by a sudden attack from the Confederate army under Gen. Albert Sidney Johnston. Grant, who heard the early morning artillery fire, took a steamboat from his headquarters at Savannah, Tennessee, to Crump’s Landing, where he gave Wallace orders to wait in reserve and be ready to move. Grant proceeded to Pittsburg Landing, where he arrived around 8:30 a.m.[52] Grant’s new orders to Wallace, which arrived between 11 and 11:30 a.m., were given verbally to an aide, who transcribed them before they were delivered.[53] The written orders were lost during the battle, so their exact wording cannot be confirmed; however, eyewitness accounts agree that Grant ordered Wallace to join the right side of the Union army, presumably in support of Brig. Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman‘s 5th Division, who were encamped near Shiloh Church on the morning of April 6.[54]
Knowledge of the area’s roads played a critical role in Wallace’s journey to the battlefield on April 6. In late March, after heavy rains made transportation difficult between Crump’s Landing and Pittsburg Landing, Wallace’s men had opened a route to Pittsburg Landing along Shunpike road, which connected to a road near Sherman’s camp. Brig. Gen. W. H. L. Wallace‘s men at Pittsburg Landing opened the River Road (also known as the Hamburg-Savannah Road), a route farther east.[55]
Of the two main routes that Wallace could use to move his men to the front, he chose the Shunpike road, the more direct route to reach Sherman’s division near Shiloh Church.[56] The day before the battle, Wallace wrote a letter to a fellow officer, W. H. L. Wallace, stating his intention to do so.[57] Lew Wallace and his staff maintained after the battle that Grant’s order did not specify Pittsburg Landing as their destination, and it did not specify which route the 3rd Division was ordered to take. However, Grant claimed in his memoirs that he had ordered Wallace to take the route nearest to the river to reach Pittsburg Landing.[58][59] Historians are divided, with some stating that Wallace’s explanation is the most logical.[33]
After a second messenger from Grant arrived around noon with word to move out, Wallace’s division of approximately 5,800 men began their march toward the battlefield.[60] Between 2 and 2:30 p.m., a third messenger from Grant found Wallace along the Shunpike road, where he informed Wallace that Sherman had been forced back from Shiloh Church and was fighting closer to the river, near Pittsburg Landing.[61] The Union army had been pushed back so far that Wallace was to the rear of the advancing Southern troops.[33]
Wallace considered attacking the Confederates, but abandoned the idea. Instead he made a controversial decision to countermarch his troops along the Shunpike road, follow a crossroads to the River Road, and then move south to Pittsburg Landing. Rather than realigning his troops, so that the rear guard would be in the front, Wallace countermarched his column to maintain their original order, keeping his artillery in the lead position to support the Union infantry on the field.[62] After the time-consuming maneuver was completed, Wallace’s troops returned to the midpoint on the Shunpike road, crossed east over a path to the River Road, and followed it south to join Grant’s army on the field. Progress was slow due to the road conditions and countermarch. Wallace’s division arrived at Pittsburg Landing about 6:30 p.m., after having marched about 14 miles (23 km) in nearly seven hours over roads that had been left in terrible conditions by recent rainstorms and previous Union marches. They gathered at the battlefield at dusk, about 7 p.m., with the fighting nearly over for the day, and took up a position on the right of the Union line.[63]
Map of the Battle of Shiloh, April 7, 1862
The next day, April 7, Wallace’s division held the extreme right of the Union line. Two of Wallace’s batteries with the aid of a battery from the 1st Illinois Light Artillery were the first to attack at about 5:30 a.m.[64][65] Sherman’s and Wallace’s troops helped force the Confederates to fall back, and by 3 p.m. the Confederates were retreating southwest, toward Corinth.[66]
Historian Timothy B. Smith conceded that on the second day Wallace’s division sustained far fewer casualties (296) than any of Buell’s three divisions. However, Smith argued that the number of casualties does not always show the effectiveness of troops. Wallace had his soldiers lie down when they were under fire, which minimized casualties. He also maneuvered his division so that it turned the Confederate left flank.[67] Wallace advanced his division at 6:30 am, reached the south side of Tilghman Branch about 8:00 am, and occupied a commanding ridge by 9:00 am, all with little opposition. Here he paused to wait for Union troops to appear on his left. Up to this point, Wallace’s movements were slow.[68] Once Grant’s and Buell’s soldiers reached the Confederate main line of defense they were stopped in heavy fighting. Noting that the Confederate left did not reach as far as Owl Creek, Wallace wheeled his division to outflank the enemy line. Finding Wallace’s troops to their left and rear, the left-hand Confederate brigade hurriedly fell back. This unhinged the entire line and the Confederate troops soon retreated to a second position around noon.[69] At around 1:00 pm, Wallace worked a few regiments around the Confederate left flank, forcing their withdrawal to a third position.[70] After the Confederates left the battlefield, Wallace’s division went the farthest south, but he pulled his troops back before going into camp that evening.[71]
Shiloh controversy[edit]
Maj. Gen. Lew Wallace
At first, the battle was viewed by the North as a victory; however, on April 23, after civilians began hearing news of the high number of casualties, the Lincoln administration asked the Union army for further explanation.[72] Grant, who was accused of poor leadership at Shiloh, and his superior, Halleck, placed the blame on Wallace by asserting that his failure to follow orders and the delay in moving up the reserves on April 6 had nearly cost them the battle.[73]
Grant had placed much of the blame on General Wallace, to whom he had sent verbal orders to bring his troops forward, accusing Wallace of failure in following those orders, which he believed resulted in the delay in moving up reserves, nearly costing the Union the loss of the battle. After hearing reports that Wallace refused to obey anything but written orders, an angry General Grant asserted that a division general ought to take his troops to wherever the firing may be, even without orders”, and first sent Colonel William R. Rowley,[74] ordering him to “tell him to come up at once” and that “if he should require a written order of you, you will give it to him at once”. When Rowley caught up to where Wallace’s division last was, there was only a supply wagon departing the scene. Riding on further, Rowley found Wallace at the head of his column near Clear Creek, positioned on high ground. Rowley pulled Wallace off to the side and warned him of the danger that lay just ahead, exclaiming, “Don’t you know that Sherman has been driven back? Why, the whole army is within half a mile of the river, and it’s a question if we are not all going to be driven into it.” Wallace, stunned by the news, sent his cavalry ahead to assess the situation, and upon returning, it had confirmed Rowley’s claim.[75][76]
On April 30, 1862, Halleck reorganized his army and removed Wallace and John McClernand from active duty, placing both of them in reserve.[77]
Wallace’s reputation and career as a military leader suffered a significant setback from controversy over Shiloh.[28] He spent the remainder of his life trying to resolve the accusations and change public opinion about his role in the battle.[73] On March 14, 1863, Wallace wrote a letter to Halleck that provided an official explanation of his actions. He also wrote Grant several letters and met with him in person more than once in an attempt to vindicate himself. On August 16, 1863, Wallace wrote Sherman for advice on the issue. Sherman urged Wallace to be patient and not to request a formal inquiry. Although Sherman brought Wallace’s concerns to Grant’s attention, Wallace was not given another active duty command until March 1864.[78]
For many years Grant stood by his original version of the orders to Wallace. As late as 1884, when Grant wrote an article on Shiloh for The Century Magazine that appeared in its February 1885 issue, he maintained that Wallace had taken the wrong road on the first day of battle.[79] After W. H. L. Wallace’s widow gave Grant a letter that Lew Wallace had written to her the day before the battle (the one indicating his plans to use the Shunpike road to pass between Shiloh and his position west of Crump’s Landing), Grant changed his mind.[80][81] Grant wrote a letter to the editors at Century, which was published in its September 1885 issue, and added a note to his memoirs to explain that Wallace’s letter “modifies very materially what I have said, and what has been said by others, about the conduct of General Lew Wallace at the battle of Shiloh.”[81] While reaffirming that he had ordered Wallace to take the River Road, Grant stated that he could not be sure the exact content of Wallace’s written orders, since his verbal orders were given to one of his aides and transcribed.[80][82]
Grant’s article in the February 1885 issue of Century became the basis of his chapter on Shiloh in his memoirs, which were published in 1886, and influenced many later accounts of Wallace’s actions on the first day of battle.[81] Grant acknowledged in his memoirs: “If the position of our front had not changed, the road which Wallace took would have been somewhat shorter to our right than the River road.”[82] Wallace’s account of the events appeared in his autobiography, which was published posthumously in 1906.[83] Despite his later fame and fortune as the writer of Ben-Hur, Wallace continued to lament, “Shiloh and its slanders! Will the world ever acquit me of them? If I were guilty I would not feel them as keenly.”[33]
Other military assignments[edit]
On August 17, 1862, Wallace accepted a regiment command in the Department of the Ohio to help with the successful defense of Cincinnati during Braxton Bragg‘s incursion into Kentucky. Next, Wallace took command of Camp Chase, a prisoner-of-war camp at Columbus, Ohio, where he remained until October 30, 1862. A month later Wallace was placed in charge of a five-member commission to investigate Maj. Gen. Don Carlos Buell‘s conduct in response to the Confederate invasion of Kentucky. The commission criticized Buell for his retreat, but it did not find him disloyal to the Union. When the commission’s work was completed on May 6, 1863, Wallace returned to Indiana to wait for a new command.[84] In mid-July 1863, while Wallace was home, he helped protect the railroad junction at North Vernon, Indiana, from Confederate general John Hunt Morgan’s raid into southern Indiana.[85]
Monocacy[edit]
Main article: Battle of Monocacy
Wallace’s most notable service came on Saturday, July 9, 1864 at the Battle of Monocacy part of the Valley Campaigns of 1864. Although Confederate General Jubal A. Early and an estimated 15,000 troops defeated Wallace’s troops at Monocacy Junction, Maryland, forcing them to retreat to Baltimore, the effort cost Early a chance to capture Washington, D.C.[86] Wallace’s men were able to delay the Confederate advance toward Washington for an entire day, giving the city time to organize its defenses. Early arrived in Washington at around noon on July 11, two days after defeating Wallace at Monocacy, the northernmost Confederate victory of the war,[87] but Union reinforcements had already arrived at Fort Stevens to repel the Confederates and force their retreat to Virginia.[88]
Wallace, who had returned to active duty on March 12, 1864, assumed command of VIII Corps, which was headquartered in Baltimore.[89] On July 9, a combined Union force of approximately 5,800 men under Wallace’s command (mostly hundred-days’ men from VIII Corps) and a division under James B. Ricketts from VI Corps encountered Confederate troops at Monocacy Junction between 9 and 10 a.m.[90] Although Wallace was uncertain whether Baltimore or Washington, D.C., was the Confederate objective, he knew his troops would have to delay the advance until Union reinforcements arrived.[91] Wallace’s men repelled the Confederate attacks for more than six hours before retreating to Baltimore.[92][93]
After the battle Wallace informed Halleck that his forces fought until 5 p.m., but the Confederate troops, which he estimated at 20,000 men, had overwhelmed them. When Grant learned of the defeat, he named Maj. Gen. E. O. C. Ord as Wallace’s replacement in command of VIII Corps. On July 28, after officials learned how Wallace’s efforts at Monocacy helped save Washington D.C. from capture, he was reinstated as commander of VIII Corps.[94] In Grant’s memoirs, he praised Wallace’s delaying tactics at Monocacy:
If Early had been but one day earlier, he might have entered the capital before the arrival of the reinforcements I had sent. … General Wallace contributed on this occasion by the defeat of the troops under him, a greater benefit to the cause than often falls to the lot of a commander of an equal force to render by means of a victory.[95]
Later military service[edit]
On January 22, 1865, Grant ordered Wallace to the Rio Grande in southern Texas to investigate Confederate military operations in the area. Although Wallace was not officially authorized to offer terms, he did discuss proposals for the surrender of the Confederate troops in the Trans-Mississippi Department. Wallace provided Grant with copies of his proposals and reported on the negotiations, but no agreement was made. Before returning to Baltimore, Wallace also met with Mexican military leaders to discuss the U.S. government’s unofficial efforts to aid in expelling Maximilian’s French occupation forces from Mexico.[96]
Following President Lincoln’s death on April 15, 1865, Wallace was appointed to the military commission that investigated the Lincoln assassination conspirators. The commission, which began in May, was dissolved on June 30, 1865, after all eight conspirators were found guilty.[97] In mid-August 1865, Wallace was appointed head of an eight-member military commission that investigated the conduct of Henry Wirz, the Confederate commandant in charge of the South’s Andersonville prison camp. The court-martial which took nearly two months, opened on August 21, 1865. At its conclusion Wirz was found guilty and sentenced to death.[19][98]
On April 30, 1865, Wallace had accepted an offer to become a major general in the Mexican army, but the agreement, which was contingent upon his resignation from the U.S. Army, was delayed by Wallace’s service on the two military commissions. Wallace tendered his resignation from the U.S. Army on November 4, 1865, effective November 30,[46][99] and returned to Mexico to assist the Mexican army. Although the Juárez government promised Wallace $100,000 for his services, he returned to the United States in 1867 in deep financial debt.[100][101]
Political and diplomatic career[edit]
Wallace returned to Indiana in 1867 to practice law, but the profession did not appeal to him, and he turned to politics.[102] Wallace made two unsuccessful bids for a seat in Congress (in 1868 and 1870), and supported Republican presidential candidate Rutherford B. Hayes in the 1876 election.[103] As a reward for his political support, Hayes appointed Wallace as governor of the New Mexico Territory, where he served from August 1878 to March 1881.[104] His next assignment came in March 1881, when Republican president James A. Garfield appointed Wallace to an overseas diplomatic post in Constantinople as U.S. Minister to the Ottoman Empire. Wallace remained in this post until 1885.[105]
Territorial governor of New Mexico[edit]
Wallace arrived in Santa Fe on September 29, 1878, to begin his service as governor of the New Mexico Territory during a time of lawless violence and political corruption.[106] Wallace was involved in efforts to resolve New Mexico’s Lincoln County War, a contentious and violent disagreement among the county’s residents, and tried to end a series of Apache raids on territorial settlers.[107] In 1880, while living at the Palace of the Governors in Santa Fe, Wallace also completed the manuscript for Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ.[108]
On March 1, 1879, after previous efforts to restore order in Lincoln County had failed, Wallace ordered the arrest of those responsible for local killings.[109] One of the outlaws was William Henry McCarty Jr. (alias William H. Bonney), better known as Billy the Kid.[110] On March 17, 1879, Wallace secretly met with Bonney, who had witnessed the murder of a Lincoln County lawyer named Huston Chapman. Wallace wanted him to testify in the trial of Chapman’s accused murderers, but Bonney wanted Wallace’s protection from his enemies and amnesty for his earlier crimes. During their meeting, the pair arranged for Bonney to become an informant in exchange for a full pardon of his previous crimes. Wallace supposedly assured the Kid that he would be “scot free with a pardon in your pocket for all your misdeeds.”[111] On March 20 Bonney agreed to provide grand jury testimony against those involved in Chapman’s murder. Wallace arranged for a “fake” arrest and Bonney’s detention in a local jail to assure his safety.[112] Bonney testified in court on April 14, as agreed. However, the local district attorney revoked Wallace’s bargain and refused to set the outlaw free.[1] After spending several weeks in jail, Bonney escaped and returned to his criminal ways, which included killing additional men. He was shot and killed on July 14, 1881, by Sheriff Pat Garrett, who had been appointed by local ranching interests who had tired of his rustling their herds. In the meantime, Wallace had resigned from his duties as territorial governor on March 9, 1881, and was waiting for a new political appointment.[113]
On December 31, 2010, on his last day in office, then-Governor Bill Richardson of New Mexico declined a pardon request from Bonney’s supporters, citing a “lack of conclusiveness and the historical ambiguity” over Wallace’s promise of amnesty. Descendants of Wallace and Garrett were among those who opposed the pardon.[114]
U.S. diplomat in the Ottoman Empire[edit]
The Prince of India (Hungarian edition, 1930s)
On May 19, 1881, Wallace was appointed U.S. Minister to the Ottoman Empire in Constantinople (present-day Istanbul, Turkey). Wallace remained at the diplomatic post until 1885, and became a trusted friend of Sultan Abdul Hamid II. When a crisis developed between the Turkish and British governments over control of Egypt, Wallace served as an intermediary between the sultan and Lord Dufferin, the British ambassador. Although Wallace’s efforts were unsuccessful, he earned respect for his efforts and a promotion in the U.S. diplomatic service.[115]
In 1883, an editorial aimed at Wallace appeared in the newspaper Havatzelet (xiii. No. 6) titled “An American and yet a Despot”. The editorial caused the Havatzelet to be suspended and its editor Israel Dov Frumkin to be imprisoned for forty-five days by order from Constantinople, directed to the pasha of the Mutasarrifate of Jerusalem. The incident that led to the editorial was the dismissal, made at Wallace’s request, of Joseph Kriger, the Jewish secretary and interpreter to the pasha of Jerusalem. Wallace complained that Kriger had failed to receive him with the honor due to his rank, and refused to issue any apology for the alleged shortcoming. Havatzelet claimed that the proceeding was instigated by missionaries, whom Wallace strongly supported.[116]
In addition to Wallace’s diplomatic duties, which included protection of U.S. citizens and U.S. trade rights in the area, Wallace found time to travel and do historical research. Wallace visited Jerusalem and the surrounding area, the site for his novel, Ben-Hur, and did research in Constantinople, the locale for The Prince of India; or, Why Constantinople Fell, which he began writing in 1887.[117]
The election of Grover Cleveland, the Democratic candidate for president, ended Wallace’s political appointment. He resigned from the U.S. diplomatic service on March 4, 1885.[118] The sultan wanted Wallace to continue to work in the Ottoman Empire, and even made a proposal to have him represent Ottoman interests in England or France, but Wallace declined and returned home to Crawfordsville.[118][119]
Writing career[edit]
Wallace confessed in his autobiography that he took up writing as a diversion from studying law. Although he wrote several books, Wallace is best known for his historical adventure story, Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ (1880), which established his fame as an author.[120]
In 1843, Wallace began writing his first novel, The Fair God, but it was not published until 1873.[121] The popular historical novel, with Cortez’s conquest of Mexico as its central theme, was based on William H. Prescott‘s History of the Conquest of Mexico.[122] Wallace’s book sold seven thousand copies in its first year. Its sales continued to rise after Wallace’s reputation as an author was established with the publication of subsequent novels.[123]
Wallace wrote the manuscript for Ben-Hur, his second and best-known novel, during his spare time at Crawfordsville, and completed it in Santa Fe, while serving as the territorial governor of New Mexico.[124][125] Ben-Hur, an adventure story of revenge and redemption, is told from the perspective of a Jewish nobleman named Judah Ben-Hur.[126] Because Wallace had not been to the Holy Land before writing the book, he began research to familiarize himself with the area’s geography and its history at the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C., in 1873.[125] Harper and Brothers published the book on November 12, 1880.[127]
Ben-Hur made Wallace a wealthy man and established his reputation as a famous author.[128] Sales were slow at first; only 2,800 copies were sold in the first seven months after its release, but the book became popular among readers around the world.[129] By 1886, it was earning Wallace about $11,000 in annual royalties (equivalent to $290,000 in 2015 dollars),[128] and provided Wallace’s family with financial security.[130] By 1889, Harper and Brothers had sold 400,000 copies and the book had been translated into several languages.[131]
In 1900, Ben-Hur became the best-selling American novel of the 19th century, surpassing Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin.[132][133] Amy Lifson, an editor for Humanities, identified it as the most influential Christian book of the 19th century.[1] Others named it one of the best-selling novels of all time.[131] At the time of Ben-Hur’s one hundredth anniversary in 1980, it had “never been out of print”[134] and had been adapted for the stage and several motion pictures.[1][135] One historian, Victor Davis Hanson, has argued that Ben-Hur drew from Wallace’s life, particularly his experiences at Shiloh, and the damage it did to his reputation. The book’s main character, Judah Ben-Hur, accidentally causes injury to a high-ranking Roman commander, for which he and his family suffer tribulations and calumny.[136]
Wallace wrote subsequent novels and biographies, but Ben-Hur remained his most important work. Wallace considered The Prince of India; or, Why Constantinople Fell (1893) as his best novel.[137] He also wrote a biography of President Benjamin Harrison, a fellow Hoosier and Civil War general, and The Wooing of Malkatoon (1898), a narrative poem. Wallace was writing his autobiography when he died in 1905. His wife Susan completed it with the assistance of Mary Hannah Krout, another author from Crawfordsville. It was published posthumously in 1906.[138]
Later years[edit]
Wallace continued to write after his return from the Ottoman Empire. He also patented several of his own inventions, built a seven-story apartment building in Indianapolis, The Blacherne, and drew up plans for a private study at his home in Crawfordsville.[139] Wallace remained active in veterans groups, including writing a speech for the dedication of the battlefield at the Chickamauga.[140]
Wallace’s elaborate writing study, which he described as “a pleasure-house for my soul”,[141] served as his private retreat.[1] Now called the General Lew Wallace Study and Museum, it was built between 1895 and 1898, adjacent to his residence in Crawfordsville, and set in an enclosed park. The study along with three and one-half acres of its grounds were designated a National Historic Landmark in 1976.[142] The property is operated as a museum, open to the public.[1][143] Wallace had a moat on two sides of the Study and stocked it so he could fish from the back porch and a landing. In winter, he would fire up the coal furnace in the Study basement and fish from the windows. He loved fishing so much he invented and patented a special traveler’s fishing pole. After just a few years he had the moat drained as it was negatively affecting the Study foundation and he worried about his grandchildren and neighborhood children falling into the water.
On April 5, 1898, at the outbreak of the Spanish–American War, Wallace, at age seventy-one, offered to raise and lead a force of soldiers, but the war office refused. Undeterred, he went to a local recruiting office and attempted to enlist as a private, but was rejected again, presumably because of his age.[144]
Wallace’s service at the battle of Shiloh continued to haunt him in later life. The debate persisted in book publications, magazine articles, pamphlets, speeches, and in private correspondence.[145] Wallace attended a reunion at Shiloh in 1894, his first return since 1862, and retraced his journey to the battlefield with veterans from the 3rd Division. He returned to Shiloh for a final time in 1901 to walk the battlefield with David W. Reed, the Shiloh Battlefield Commission’s historian, and others. Wallace died before the manuscript of his memoirs was fully completed, and it is unknown whether he would have revised his final account of the battle.[146]
Death[edit]
Wallace died at home in Crawfordsville, on February 15, 1905,[33] of atrophic gastritis.[147] He was seventy-seven years old.[1] Wallace is buried in Crawfordsville Oak Hill Cemetery.[148]
Legacy and honors[edit]
Wallace’s statue in the U.S. Capitol
Wallace was a man of many interests and a lifelong adventure seeker, who remained a persistent, self-confident man of action. He was also impatient and highly sensitive to personal criticisms, especially those related to his command decisions at Shiloh.[149] Despite Wallace’s career in law and politics, combined with years of military and diplomatic service, he achieved his greatest fame as a novelist, most notably for his best-selling biblical tale, Ben-Hur.
Following Wallace’s death, the State of Indiana commissioned the sculptor Andrew O’Connor to create a marble statue of Wallace dressed in a military uniform for the National Statuary Hall Collection in the U.S. Capitol. The statue was unveiled during a ceremony held on January 11, 1910.[150] Wallace is the only novelist honored in the hall.[1] A bronze copy of the statue is installed on the grounds of Wallace’s study in Crawfordsville.[150][151]
Lew Wallace High School opened in 1926 at 415 West 45th Avenue in Gary, Indiana. On June 3, 2014, the Gary School Board voted 4 to 2 to close Lew Wallace, along with five other schools.[152]
A Knights of Pythias lodge was established in Franklin, Indiana at the Masonic Home to be known as the General Lewis Wallace Lodge #2019.
Popular culture[edit]
NASL Indianapolis-based team The Indy Eleven pays homage to the 11th Regiment of Indiana Volunteers, which fought for the Union Army during the Civil War. The inspiration for the name came from Donna Schmink, the Collection Manager at the Indiana War Museum, who, when asked by team officials for ideas on a team name connected to Indiana history, suggested “the Eleventh” in honor of the regiment that valiantly fought under the initial direction of Colonel Lew Wallace.[153]
Film and television[edit]
- Frank Reicher (uncredited) as General Lew Wallace in the film Billy the Kid (1930).
- Berton Churchill as Gov. Wallace in The Big Stampede (1932).
- Joe King (actor) (uncredited) as Governor Lew Wallace in Land Beyond the Law (1937).
- Robert H. Barrat as General Lew Wallace in The Kid from Texas (1950).
- Claude Stroud as Gen. Lew Wallace – New Mexico Governor in I Shot Billy the Kid (1950).
- Otis Garth (uncredited) as Gov. Lew Wallace in The Law vs. Billy the Kid (1954).
- Ralph Moody as Gen. Lew Wallace in Strange Lady in Town (1955).
- Robert Warwick as Governor Wallace in Law of the Plainsman (TV series), episode “Amnesty” (aired April 7, 1960).
- Cameron Mitchell as General Lew Wallace in The Andersonville Trial (TV), which aired May 17, 1970; an adaptation of the 1959 Broadway play by the same name.
- Jason Robards as Governor Wallace in Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid (1973).
- René Auberjonois as Gov. Lew Wallace in Longarm (TV film, 1988).
- Wilford Brimley as Gov. Lew Wallace in Billy the Kid (TNT film, 1989).
- Scott Wilson as Governor Lewis Wallace in the film Young Guns II (1990).
- Brian Merrick as Gen. Lew Wallace in No Retreat from Destiny: The Battle That Rescued Washington (2006 video).
Published works[edit]
Fiction
- The Fair God; or, The Last of the ‘Tzins: A Tale of the Conquest of Mexico (Boston: James R. Osgood and Company, 1873.)[154]
- Commodus: An Historical Play (Crawfordsville, IN: privately published by the author, 1876.) Revised and reissued in the same year.[155]
- Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ (New York: Harper and Brothers, 1880.)[156]
- The First Christmas from Ben-Hur (New York: Harper and Brothers, 1899.)[157]
- The Boyhood of Christ (New York: Harper and Brothers, 1888.)[158]
- The Prince of India; or, Why Constantinople Fell (New York: Harper and Brothers, 1893.) Two volumes.[159]
- The Wooing of Malkatoon (New York: Harper and Brothers, 1898.)[160]
Non-Fiction
- Life of Gen. Ben Harrison (Philadelphia: Hubbard Brothers, 1888.)[161]
- Life and Public Services of Hon. Benjamin Harrison, President of the U.S. With a Concise Biographical Sketch of Hon. Whitelaw Reid, Ex-Minister to France [by Murat Halstad] (Philadelphia: Edgewood Publishing Co., 1892.)
- Lew Wallace: An Autobiography (New York: Harper and Brothers, 1906.) Two volumes.[162]
See also[edit]
- Bibliography of the American Civil War
- Bibliography of Ulysses S. Grant
- List of American Civil War battles
- List of American Civil War generals (Union)
References[edit]
- ^ Jump up to:a b c d e f g h i Amy Lifson (2009). “Ben-Hur: The Book That Shook the World”. Humanities. Washington D.C.: National Endowment for the Humanities. 30 (6). Retrieved April 11, 2017.
- ^ McKee, The Early Life of Lew Wallace, p. 206.
- ^ Woodworth, p. 63.
- ^ Gugin and St. Clair, pp. 82, 85.
- ^ Boomhower, pp. 13–14.
- ^ Stephens, p. 1; Boomhower, pp. 14, 16; McKee, The Early Life of Lew Wallace, p. 207.
- ^ Gugin and St. Clair, pp. 82, 85; Boomhower, p. 19; Stephens, p. 2.
- ^ Morrow, p. 3.
- ^ Boomhower, p. 9 and 15, and Morrow, p. 4.
- ^ Boomhower, p. 17.
- ^ Jump up to:a b Gronert, p. 71.
- ^ Boomhower, pp. 9, 20–21; McKee, The Early Life of Lew Wallace, p. 211.
- ^ Boomhower, p. 22.
- ^ McKee, The Early Life of Lew Wallace, p. 214.
- ^ Stephens, pp. 2–3, 13; Boomhower, pp. 3, 9, 23–26.
- ^ Boomhower, p. 11.
- ^ Stephens, p. 4; Boomhower, p. 3, 26–27; Morrow, p. 6.
- ^ Warner, pp. 536–537; Woodworth, p. 64.
- ^ Jump up to:a b c d Eicher, p. 551.
- ^ Stephens, p. 8.
- ^ “Free Soil Banner”, digitized by the Indianapolis Marion County Public Library.
- ^ Boomhower, p. 35.
- ^ Stephens, p. 10.
- ^ Boomhower, pp. 39–41.
- ^ Morrow, p. 8.
- ^ Stephens, pp. 9, 11, 13; Boomhower, pp. 41, 44.
- ^ Jump up to:a b c Forbes, p. 388.
- ^ Jump up to:a b c d Morrow, p. 9.
- ^ “Indiana State Historic Architectural and Archaeological Research Database (SHAARD)” (Searchable database). Department of Natural Resources, Division of Historic Preservation and Archaeology. Retrieved October 1, 2015. Note: This includes Carol Ann Freese; Nancy Wagner (December 2001). “National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form: Fountain County Courthouse” (PDF). Retrieved October 1, 2015. and Accompanying photographs.
- ^ Stephens, p. 14; Boomhower, pp. 4, 44.
- ^ “Timeline”.
- ^ Morsberger and Morseberger, p. 54.
- ^ Jump up to:a b c d e f g Swansburg, John (March 26, 2013). “The Passion of Lew Wallac
Lew Wallace
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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For the Oregon state senator, see Lew Wallace (politician).
Lewis Wallace (April 10, 1827 – February 15, 1905) was an American lawyer, Union general in the American Civil War, governor of the New Mexico Territory, politician, diplomat, and author from Indiana. Among his novels and biographies, Wallace is best known for his historical adventure story, Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ (1880), a bestselling novel that has been called “the most influential Christian book of the nineteenth century.”[1]
Wallace’s military career included service in the Mexican–American War and the American Civil War. He was appointed Indiana’s adjutant general and commanded the 11th Indiana Infantry Regiment. Wallace, who attained the rank of major general, participated in the Battle of Fort Donelson, the Battle of Shiloh, and the Battle of Monocacy. He also served on the military commission for the trials of the Lincoln assassination conspirators, and presided over the trial of Henry Wirz, the Confederate commandant of the Andersonville prison camp.
Wallace resigned from the U.S. Army in November 1865 and briefly served as a major general in the Mexican army, before returning to the United States. Wallace was appointed governor of the New Mexico Territory (1878–1881) and served as U.S. minister to the Ottoman Empire (1881–1885). Wallace retired to his home in Crawfordsville, Indiana, where he continued to write until his death in 1905.
Contents
- 1Early life and education
- 2Marriage and family
- 3Early law and military career
- 4Civil War service
- 5Political and diplomatic career
- 6Writing career
- 7Later years
- 8Death
- 9Legacy and honors
- 10Popular culture
- 11Published works
- 12See also
- 13References
- 14Bibliography
- 15Further reading
- 16External links
Early life and education[edit]
Lewis “Lew” Wallace was born on April 10, 1827, in Brookville, Indiana. He was the second of four sons born to Esther French Wallace (née Test) and David Wallace.[2] Lew’s father, a graduate of the U.S. Military Academy in West Point, New York,[3] left the military in 1822 and moved to Brookville, where he established a law practice and entered Indiana politics. David served in the Indiana General Assembly and later as the state’s lieutenant governor, and governor, and as a member of Congress.[4][5] Lew Wallace’s maternal grandfather was circuit court judge and Congressman John Test.
In 1832 the family moved to Covington, Indiana, where Lew’s mother died from tuberculosis on July 14, 1834.[6] In December 1836, David married nineteen-year-old Zerelda Gray Sanders Wallace, who later became a prominent suffragist and temperance advocate. In 1837, after David’s election as governor of Indiana, the family moved to Indianapolis.[7][8]
Lew began his formal education at the age of six at a public school in Covington, but he much preferred the outdoors. Wallace had a talent for drawing and loved to read, but he was a discipline problem at school.[9] In 1836, at the age of nine, Lew joined his older brother in Crawfordsville, Indiana, where he briefly attended the preparatory school division of Wabash College, but soon transferred to another school more suitable for his age.[10] In 1840, when Wallace was thirteen, his father sent him to a private academy at Centerville, Indiana, where his teacher encouraged Lew’s natural affinity for writing. Wallace returned to Indianapolis the following year.[11][12]
Sixteen-year-old Lew went out to earn his own wages in 1842, after his father refused to pay for more schooling.[13] Wallace found a job copying records at the Marion County clerk’s office and lived in an Indianapolis boardinghouse.[14] He also joined the Marion Rifles, a local militia unit, and began writing his first novel, The Fair God, but it was not published until 1873.[15] Wallace said in his autobiography that he had never been a member of any organized religion, but he did believe “in the Christian conception of God”.[1][16]
By 1846, at the start of the Mexican–American War, the nineteen-year-old Wallace was studying law at his father’s law office, but left that pursuit to establish a recruiting office for the Marion Volunteers in Indianapolis. He was appointed a second lieutenant, and on June 19, 1846, mustered into military service with the Marion Volunteers (also known as Company H, 1st Indiana Volunteer Infantry).[17] Wallace rose to the position of regimental adjutant and the rank of first lieutenant while serving in the army of Zachary Taylor, but Wallace personally did not participate in combat.[18] Wallace was mustered out of the volunteer service on June 15, 1847,[19] and returned to Indiana, where he intended to practice law.[20] After the war, Wallace and William B. Greer operated a Free Soil newspaper, The Free Soil Banner, in Indianapolis.[21]
Marriage and family[edit]
In 1848 Wallace met Susan Arnold Elston at the Crawfordsville home of Henry Smith Lane, Wallace’s former commander during the Mexican War.[22] Susan was the daughter of Major Isaac Compton Elston, a wealthy Crawfordsville merchant, and Maria Akin Elston, whose family were Quakers from upstate New York.[23] Susan accepted Wallace’s marriage proposal in 1849, and they were married in Crawfordsville on May 6, 1852.[24] The Wallaces had one son, Henry Lane Wallace, who was born on February 17, 1853.[25]
Early law and military career[edit]
Wallace was admitted to the bar in February 1849, and moved from Indianapolis to Covington, Indiana, where he established a law practice. In 1851 Wallace was elected prosecuting attorney of Indiana’s 1st congressional district,[11] but he resigned in 1853 and moved his family to Crawfordsville, in Montgomery County, Indiana. Wallace continued to practice law and was elected as a Democrat to a two-year term in the Indiana Senate in 1856.[26][27][28] From 1849 to 1853, his office was housed in the Fountain County Clerk’s Building.[29]: 8
While living in Crawfordsville, Wallace organized the Crawfordsville Guards Independent Militia, later called the Montgomery Guards. During the winter of 1859–60, after reading about elite units of the French Army in Algeria, Wallace adopted the Zouave uniform and their system of training for the group. The Montgomery Guards would later form the core of his first military command, the 11th Indiana Volunteer Infantry, during the American Civil War.[27][30][31]
Civil War service[edit]
Wallace, a staunch supporter of the Union, became a member of the Republican party,[27] and began his full-time military career soon after the Confederate attack on Fort Sumter, South Carolina, on April 12, 1861. Indiana’s governor, the Republican Oliver P. Morton, asked Wallace to help recruit Indiana volunteers for the Union army.[32] Wallace, who also sought a military command, agreed to become the state’s adjutant general on the condition that he would be given command of a regiment of his choice.[33][34] Indiana’s quota of six regimental units was filled within a week,[35] and Wallace took command of the 11th Indiana Volunteer Infantry Regiment, which was mustered into the Union army on April 25, 1861. Wallace received his formal commission as a colonel in the Union army the following day.[19][28][36]
On June 5, 1861, Wallace went with the 11th Indiana to Cumberland, Maryland, and on June 12, the regiment won a minor battle at Romney, Virginia, (in present-day West Virginia).[28][37][33] The rout boosted morale for Union troops and led to the Confederate evacuation of Harpers Ferry on June 18.[38] On September 3, 1861, Wallace was promoted to brigadier general of U.S. Army volunteers and given command of a brigade.[19]
Forts Henry and Donelson[edit]
Main articles: Battle of Fort Henry and Battle of Fort Donelson
On February 4 and 5, 1862, prior to the advance against Fort Henry, Union troops under the command of Brig. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant and a flotilla of Union ironclads and timberclad gunboats under the command of Flag Officer Andrew Hull Foote made their way toward the Confederate fort along the Tennessee River in western Tennessee. Wallace’s brigade, which was attached to Brig. Gen. Charles F. Smith‘s division, was ordered to occupy Fort Heiman, an uncompleted Confederate fort across the river from Fort Henry. Wallace’s troops secured the deserted fort and watched the Union attack on Fort Henry from their hilltop position. On February 6, after more than an hour of bombardment from the Union gunboats, Confederate Brig. Gen. Lloyd Tilghman, surrendered Fort Henry to Grant.[39]
Map showing Wallace’s counterattack at Fort Donelson (1862)
Grant’s superior, Maj. Gen. Henry W. Halleck, was concerned that Confederate reinforcements would try to retake the two forts when the Union troops moved overland toward Fort Donelson, so Wallace was left in command at Fort Henry to keep the forts secure.[40][41] Displeased to have been left behind,[33] Wallace prepared his troops to move out at a moment’s notice. The order came at midnight on February 13. Wallace arrived along the Cumberland River the following day and was placed in charge of the 3rd Division. Many of the men in the division were untested reinforcements.[42] Wallace’s three brigades took up position in the center of the Union line, facing Fort Donelson.[40]
During the fierce Confederate assault on February 15, and in Grant’s absence from the battlefield, Wallace acted on his own initiative to send Cruft’s brigade to reinforce the beleaguered division of Brig. Gen. John A. McClernand, despite orders from Grant to hold his position and prevent the enemy from escaping and without Grant’s authority to take the offensive.[43][44] With the Confederates continuing to advance, Wallace led a second brigade to the right and engaged the Confederates with infantry and artillery. Wallace’s decision stopped their forward movement and was key in stabilizing a defensive line for the Union troops. After the Confederate assault had been checked, Wallace led a counterattack that regained the lost ground on the Union right.[45] On March 21, 1862, Wallace, McClernand, and C. F. Smith were promoted to major general for their efforts.[46] Wallace, who was age thirty-four at the time of his promotion, became the youngest major general in the Union army.[47]
Shiloh[edit]
Main article: Battle of Shiloh
Map of the Battle of Shiloh, afternoon of April 6, 1862
Wallace’s most controversial command came at the battle of Shiloh, where he continued as the 3rd Division commander under Maj. Gen. Grant.
What was to become a long-standing controversy developed around the contents of Wallace’s written orders on April 6, the 3rd Division’s movements on the first day of battle, and their late arrival on the field.[48] On the second day of battle, Wallace’s division joined reinforcements from Maj. Gen. Don Carlos Buell‘s army to play an important role in the Union victory.[49] Prior to the battle, Wallace’s division had been left in reserve and was encamped near Crump’s Landing. Their orders were to guard the Union’s right flank and cover the road to Bethel Station, Tennessee, where railroad lines led to Corinth, Mississippi, 20 miles (32 km) to the south.[50] To protect the road from Crump’s Landing and Bethel Station, Wallace sent Col. John M. Thayer‘s 2nd Brigade to Stoney Lonesome, 3 miles (4.8 km) west of Crump’s Landing, and the 3rd Brigade, commanded by Col. Charles Whittlesey to Adamsville, 5.5 miles (8.9 km) west of Crump’s Landing. Col. Morgan L. Smith‘s 1st Brigade remained with Wallace at Crump’s Landing, 5 miles (8.0 km) north of Pittsburg Landing, Tennessee.[51]
Between 5 and 6 a.m. on April 6, 1862, Grant’s army at Pittsburg Landing was surprised and nearly routed by a sudden attack from the Confederate army under Gen. Albert Sidney Johnston. Grant, who heard the early morning artillery fire, took a steamboat from his headquarters at Savannah, Tennessee, to Crump’s Landing, where he gave Wallace orders to wait in reserve and be ready to move. Grant proceeded to Pittsburg Landing, where he arrived around 8:30 a.m.[52] Grant’s new orders to Wallace, which arrived between 11 and 11:30 a.m., were given verbally to an aide, who transcribed them before they were delivered.[53] The written orders were lost during the battle, so their exact wording cannot be confirmed; however, eyewitness accounts agree that Grant ordered Wallace to join the right side of the Union army, presumably in support of Brig. Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman‘s 5th Division, who were encamped near Shiloh Church on the morning of April 6.[54]
Knowledge of the area’s roads played a critical role in Wallace’s journey to the battlefield on April 6. In late March, after heavy rains made transportation difficult between Crump’s Landing and Pittsburg Landing, Wallace’s men had opened a route to Pittsburg Landing along Shunpike road, which connected to a road near Sherman’s camp. Brig. Gen. W. H. L. Wallace‘s men at Pittsburg Landing opened the River Road (also known as the Hamburg-Savannah Road), a route farther east.[55]
Of the two main routes that Wallace could use to move his men to the front, he chose the Shunpike road, the more direct route to reach Sherman’s division near Shiloh Church.[56] The day before the battle, Wallace wrote a letter to a fellow officer, W. H. L. Wallace, stating his intention to do so.[57] Lew Wallace and his staff maintained after the battle that Grant’s order did not specify Pittsburg Landing as their destination, and it did not specify which route the 3rd Division was ordered to take. However, Grant claimed in his memoirs that he had ordered Wallace to take the route nearest to the river to reach Pittsburg Landing.[58][59] Historians are divided, with some stating that Wallace’s explanation is the most logical.[33]
After a second messenger from Grant arrived around noon with word to move out, Wallace’s division of approximately 5,800 men began their march toward the battlefield.[60] Between 2 and 2:30 p.m., a third messenger from Grant found Wallace along the Shunpike road, where he informed Wallace that Sherman had been forced back from Shiloh Church and was fighting closer to the river, near Pittsburg Landing.[61] The Union army had been pushed back so far that Wallace was to the rear of the advancing Southern troops.[33]
Wallace considered attacking the Confederates, but abandoned the idea. Instead he made a controversial decision to countermarch his troops along the Shunpike road, follow a crossroads to the River Road, and then move south to Pittsburg Landing. Rather than realigning his troops, so that the rear guard would be in the front, Wallace countermarched his column to maintain their original order, keeping his artillery in the lead position to support the Union infantry on the field.[62] After the time-consuming maneuver was completed, Wallace’s troops returned to the midpoint on the Shunpike road, crossed east over a path to the River Road, and followed it south to join Grant’s army on the field. Progress was slow due to the road conditions and countermarch. Wallace’s division arrived at Pittsburg Landing about 6:30 p.m., after having marched about 14 miles (23 km) in nearly seven hours over roads that had been left in terrible conditions by recent rainstorms and previous Union marches. They gathered at the battlefield at dusk, about 7 p.m., with the fighting nearly over for the day, and took up a position on the right of the Union line.[63]
Map of the Battle of Shiloh, April 7, 1862
The next day, April 7, Wallace’s division held the extreme right of the Union line. Two of Wallace’s batteries with the aid of a battery from the 1st Illinois Light Artillery were the first to attack at about 5:30 a.m.[64][65] Sherman’s and Wallace’s troops helped force the Confederates to fall back, and by 3 p.m. the Confederates were retreating southwest, toward Corinth.[66]
Historian Timothy B. Smith conceded that on the second day Wallace’s division sustained far fewer casualties (296) than any of Buell’s three divisions. However, Smith argued that the number of casualties does not always show the effectiveness of troops. Wallace had his soldiers lie down when they were under fire, which minimized casualties. He also maneuvered his division so that it turned the Confederate left flank.[67] Wallace advanced his division at 6:30 am, reached the south side of Tilghman Branch about 8:00 am, and occupied a commanding ridge by 9:00 am, all with little opposition. Here he paused to wait for Union troops to appear on his left. Up to this point, Wallace’s movements were slow.[68] Once Grant’s and Buell’s soldiers reached the Confederate main line of defense they were stopped in heavy fighting. Noting that the Confederate left did not reach as far as Owl Creek, Wallace wheeled his division to outflank the enemy line. Finding Wallace’s troops to their left and rear, the left-hand Confederate brigade hurriedly fell back. This unhinged the entire line and the Confederate troops soon retreated to a second position around noon.[69] At around 1:00 pm, Wallace worked a few regiments around the Confederate left flank, forcing their withdrawal to a third position.[70] After the Confederates left the battlefield, Wallace’s division went the farthest south, but he pulled his troops back before going into camp that evening.[71]
Shiloh controversy[edit]
Maj. Gen. Lew Wallace
At first, the battle was viewed by the North as a victory; however, on April 23, after civilians began hearing news of the high number of casualties, the Lincoln administration asked the Union army for further explanation.[72] Grant, who was accused of poor leadership at Shiloh, and his superior, Halleck, placed the blame on Wallace by asserting that his failure to follow orders and the delay in moving up the reserves on April 6 had nearly cost them the battle.[73]
Grant had placed much of the blame on General Wallace, to whom he had sent verbal orders to bring his troops forward, accusing Wallace of failure in following those orders, which he believed resulted in the delay in moving up reserves, nearly costing the Union the loss of the battle. After hearing reports that Wallace refused to obey anything but written orders, an angry General Grant asserted that a division general ought to take his troops to wherever the firing may be, even without orders”, and first sent Colonel William R. Rowley,[74] ordering him to “tell him to come up at once” and that “if he should require a written order of you, you will give it to him at once”. When Rowley caught up to where Wallace’s division last was, there was only a supply wagon departing the scene. Riding on further, Rowley found Wallace at the head of his column near Clear Creek, positioned on high ground. Rowley pulled Wallace off to the side and warned him of the danger that lay just ahead, exclaiming, “Don’t you know that Sherman has been driven back? Why, the whole army is within half a mile of the river, and it’s a question if we are not all going to be driven into it.” Wallace, stunned by the news, sent his cavalry ahead to assess the situation, and upon returning, it had confirmed Rowley’s claim.[75][76]
On April 30, 1862, Halleck reorganized his army and removed Wallace and John McClernand from active duty, placing both of them in reserve.[77]
Wallace’s reputation and career as a military leader suffered a significant setback from controversy over Shiloh.[28] He spent the remainder of his life trying to resolve the accusations and change public opinion about his role in the battle.[73] On March 14, 1863, Wallace wrote a letter to Halleck that provided an official explanation of his actions. He also wrote Grant several letters and met with him in person more than once in an attempt to vindicate himself. On August 16, 1863, Wallace wrote Sherman for advice on the issue. Sherman urged Wallace to be patient and not to request a formal inquiry. Although Sherman brought Wallace’s concerns to Grant’s attention, Wallace was not given another active duty command until March 1864.[78]
For many years Grant stood by his original version of the orders to Wallace. As late as 1884, when Grant wrote an article on Shiloh for The Century Magazine that appeared in its February 1885 issue, he maintained that Wallace had taken the wrong road on the first day of battle.[79] After W. H. L. Wallace’s widow gave Grant a letter that Lew Wallace had written to her the day before the battle (the one indicating his plans to use the Shunpike road to pass between Shiloh and his position west of Crump’s Landing), Grant changed his mind.[80][81] Grant wrote a letter to the editors at Century, which was published in its September 1885 issue, and added a note to his memoirs to explain that Wallace’s letter “modifies very materially what I have said, and what has been said by others, about the conduct of General Lew Wallace at the battle of Shiloh.”[81] While reaffirming that he had ordered Wallace to take the River Road, Grant stated that he could not be sure the exact content of Wallace’s written orders, since his verbal orders were given to one of his aides and transcribed.[80][82]
Grant’s article in the February 1885 issue of Century became the basis of his chapter on Shiloh in his memoirs, which were published in 1886, and influenced many later accounts of Wallace’s actions on the first day of battle.[81] Grant acknowledged in his memoirs: “If the position of our front had not changed, the road which Wallace took would have been somewhat shorter to our right than the River road.”[82] Wallace’s account of the events appeared in his autobiography, which was published posthumously in 1906.[83] Despite his later fame and fortune as the writer of Ben-Hur, Wallace continued to lament, “Shiloh and its slanders! Will the world ever acquit me of them? If I were guilty I would not feel them as keenly.”[33]
Other military assignments[edit]
On August 17, 1862, Wallace accepted a regiment command in the Department of the Ohio to help with the successful defense of Cincinnati during Braxton Bragg‘s incursion into Kentucky. Next, Wallace took command of Camp Chase, a prisoner-of-war camp at Columbus, Ohio, where he remained until October 30, 1862. A month later Wallace was placed in charge of a five-member commission to investigate Maj. Gen. Don Carlos Buell‘s conduct in response to the Confederate invasion of Kentucky. The commission criticized Buell for his retreat, but it did not find him disloyal to the Union. When the commission’s work was completed on May 6, 1863, Wallace returned to Indiana to wait for a new command.[84] In mid-July 1863, while Wallace was home, he helped protect the railroad junction at North Vernon, Indiana, from Confederate general John Hunt Morgan’s raid into southern Indiana.[85]
Monocacy[edit]
Main article: Battle of Monocacy
Wallace’s most notable service came on Saturday, July 9, 1864 at the Battle of Monocacy part of the Valley Campaigns of 1864. Although Confederate General Jubal A. Early and an estimated 15,000 troops defeated Wallace’s troops at Monocacy Junction, Maryland, forcing them to retreat to Baltimore, the effort cost Early a chance to capture Washington, D.C.[86] Wallace’s men were able to delay the Confederate advance toward Washington for an entire day, giving the city time to organize its defenses. Early arrived in Washington at around noon on July 11, two days after defeating Wallace at Monocacy, the northernmost Confederate victory of the war,[87] but Union reinforcements had already arrived at Fort Stevens to repel the Confederates and force their retreat to Virginia.[88]
Wallace, who had returned to active duty on March 12, 1864, assumed command of VIII Corps, which was headquartered in Baltimore.[89] On July 9, a combined Union force of approximately 5,800 men under Wallace’s command (mostly hundred-days’ men from VIII Corps) and a division under James B. Ricketts from VI Corps encountered Confederate troops at Monocacy Junction between 9 and 10 a.m.[90] Although Wallace was uncertain whether Baltimore or Washington, D.C., was the Confederate objective, he knew his troops would have to delay the advance until Union reinforcements arrived.[91] Wallace’s men repelled the Confederate attacks for more than six hours before retreating to Baltimore.[92][93]
After the battle Wallace informed Halleck that his forces fought until 5 p.m., but the Confederate troops, which he estimated at 20,000 men, had overwhelmed them. When Grant learned of the defeat, he named Maj. Gen. E. O. C. Ord as Wallace’s replacement in command of VIII Corps. On July 28, after officials learned how Wallace’s efforts at Monocacy helped save Washington D.C. from capture, he was reinstated as commander of VIII Corps.[94] In Grant’s memoirs, he praised Wallace’s delaying tactics at Monocacy:
If Early had been but one day earlier, he might have entered the capital before the arrival of the reinforcements I had sent. … General Wallace contributed on this occasion by the defeat of the troops under him, a greater benefit to the cause than often falls to the lot of a commander of an equal force to render by means of a victory.[95]
Later military service[edit]
On January 22, 1865, Grant ordered Wallace to the Rio Grande in southern Texas to investigate Confederate military operations in the area. Although Wallace was not officially authorized to offer terms, he did discuss proposals for the surrender of the Confederate troops in the Trans-Mississippi Department. Wallace provided Grant with copies of his proposals and reported on the negotiations, but no agreement was made. Before returning to Baltimore, Wallace also met with Mexican military leaders to discuss the U.S. government’s unofficial efforts to aid in expelling Maximilian’s French occupation forces from Mexico.[96]
Following President Lincoln’s death on April 15, 1865, Wallace was appointed to the military commission that investigated the Lincoln assassination conspirators. The commission, which began in May, was dissolved on June 30, 1865, after all eight conspirators were found guilty.[97] In mid-August 1865, Wallace was appointed head of an eight-member military commission that investigated the conduct of Henry Wirz, the Confederate commandant in charge of the South’s Andersonville prison camp. The court-martial which took nearly two months, opened on August 21, 1865. At its conclusion Wirz was found guilty and sentenced to death.[19][98]
On April 30, 1865, Wallace had accepted an offer to become a major general in the Mexican army, but the agreement, which was contingent upon his resignation from the U.S. Army, was delayed by Wallace’s service on the two military commissions. Wallace tendered his resignation from the U.S. Army on November 4, 1865, effective November 30,[46][99] and returned to Mexico to assist the Mexican army. Although the Juárez government promised Wallace $100,000 for his services, he returned to the United States in 1867 in deep financial debt.[100][101]
Political and diplomatic career[edit]
Wallace returned to Indiana in 1867 to practice law, but the profession did not appeal to him, and he turned to politics.[102] Wallace made two unsuccessful bids for a seat in Congress (in 1868 and 1870), and supported Republican presidential candidate Rutherford B. Hayes in the 1876 election.[103] As a reward for his political support, Hayes appointed Wallace as governor of the New Mexico Territory, where he served from August 1878 to March 1881.[104] His next assignment came in March 1881, when Republican president James A. Garfield appointed Wallace to an overseas diplomatic post in Constantinople as U.S. Minister to the Ottoman Empire. Wallace remained in this post until 1885.[105]
Territorial governor of New Mexico[edit]
Wallace arrived in Santa Fe on September 29, 1878, to begin his service as governor of the New Mexico Territory during a time of lawless violence and political corruption.[106] Wallace was involved in efforts to resolve New Mexico’s Lincoln County War, a contentious and violent disagreement among the county’s residents, and tried to end a series of Apache raids on territorial settlers.[107] In 1880, while living at the Palace of the Governors in Santa Fe, Wallace also completed the manuscript for Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ.[108]
On March 1, 1879, after previous efforts to restore order in Lincoln County had failed, Wallace ordered the arrest of those responsible for local killings.[109] One of the outlaws was William Henry McCarty Jr. (alias William H. Bonney), better known as Billy the Kid.[110] On March 17, 1879, Wallace secretly met with Bonney, who had witnessed the murder of a Lincoln County lawyer named Huston Chapman. Wallace wanted him to testify in the trial of Chapman’s accused murderers, but Bonney wanted Wallace’s protection from his enemies and amnesty for his earlier crimes. During their meeting, the pair arranged for Bonney to become an informant in exchange for a full pardon of his previous crimes. Wallace supposedly assured the Kid that he would be “scot free with a pardon in your pocket for all your misdeeds.”[111] On March 20 Bonney agreed to provide grand jury testimony against those involved in Chapman’s murder. Wallace arranged for a “fake” arrest and Bonney’s detention in a local jail to assure his safety.[112] Bonney testified in court on April 14, as agreed. However, the local district attorney revoked Wallace’s bargain and refused to set the outlaw free.[1] After spending several weeks in jail, Bonney escaped and returned to his criminal ways, which included killing additional men. He was shot and killed on July 14, 1881, by Sheriff Pat Garrett, who had been appointed by local ranching interests who had tired of his rustling their herds. In the meantime, Wallace had resigned from his duties as territorial governor on March 9, 1881, and was waiting for a new political appointment.[113]
On December 31, 2010, on his last day in office, then-Governor Bill Richardson of New Mexico declined a pardon request from Bonney’s supporters, citing a “lack of conclusiveness and the historical ambiguity” over Wallace’s promise of amnesty. Descendants of Wallace and Garrett were among those who opposed the pardon.[114]
U.S. diplomat in the Ottoman Empire[edit]
The Prince of India (Hungarian edition, 1930s)
On May 19, 1881, Wallace was appointed U.S. Minister to the Ottoman Empire in Constantinople (present-day Istanbul, Turkey). Wallace remained at the diplomatic post until 1885, and became a trusted friend of Sultan Abdul Hamid II. When a crisis developed between the Turkish and British governments over control of Egypt, Wallace served as an intermediary between the sultan and Lord Dufferin, the British ambassador. Although Wallace’s efforts were unsuccessful, he earned respect for his efforts and a promotion in the U.S. diplomatic service.[115]
In 1883, an editorial aimed at Wallace appeared in the newspaper Havatzelet (xiii. No. 6) titled “An American and yet a Despot”. The editorial caused the Havatzelet to be suspended and its editor Israel Dov Frumkin to be imprisoned for forty-five days by order from Constantinople, directed to the pasha of the Mutasarrifate of Jerusalem. The incident that led to the editorial was the dismissal, made at Wallace’s request, of Joseph Kriger, the Jewish secretary and interpreter to the pasha of Jerusalem. Wallace complained that Kriger had failed to receive him with the honor due to his rank, and refused to issue any apology for the alleged shortcoming. Havatzelet claimed that the proceeding was instigated by missionaries, whom Wallace strongly supported.[116]
In addition to Wallace’s diplomatic duties, which included protection of U.S. citizens and U.S. trade rights in the area, Wallace found time to travel and do historical research. Wallace visited Jerusalem and the surrounding area, the site for his novel, Ben-Hur, and did research in Constantinople, the locale for The Prince of India; or, Why Constantinople Fell, which he began writing in 1887.[117]
The election of Grover Cleveland, the Democratic candidate for president, ended Wallace’s political appointment. He resigned from the U.S. diplomatic service on March 4, 1885.[118] The sultan wanted Wallace to continue to work in the Ottoman Empire, and even made a proposal to have him represent Ottoman interests in England or France, but Wallace declined and returned home to Crawfordsville.[118][119]
Writing career[edit]
Wallace confessed in his autobiography that he took up writing as a diversion from studying law. Although he wrote several books, Wallace is best known for his historical adventure story, Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ (1880), which established his fame as an author.[120]
In 1843, Wallace began writing his first novel, The Fair God, but it was not published until 1873.[121] The popular historical novel, with Cortez’s conquest of Mexico as its central theme, was based on William H. Prescott‘s History of the Conquest of Mexico.[122] Wallace’s book sold seven thousand copies in its first year. Its sales continued to rise after Wallace’s reputation as an author was established with the publication of subsequent novels.[123]
Wallace wrote the manuscript for Ben-Hur, his second and best-known novel, during his spare time at Crawfordsville, and completed it in Santa Fe, while serving as the territorial governor of New Mexico.[124][125] Ben-Hur, an adventure story of revenge and redemption, is told from the perspective of a Jewish nobleman named Judah Ben-Hur.[126] Because Wallace had not been to the Holy Land before writing the book, he began research to familiarize himself with the area’s geography and its history at the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C., in 1873.[125] Harper and Brothers published the book on November 12, 1880.[127]
Ben-Hur made Wallace a wealthy man and established his reputation as a famous author.[128] Sales were slow at first; only 2,800 copies were sold in the first seven months after its release, but the book became popular among readers around the world.[129] By 1886, it was earning Wallace about $11,000 in annual royalties (equivalent to $290,000 in 2015 dollars),[128] and provided Wallace’s family with financial security.[130] By 1889, Harper and Brothers had sold 400,000 copies and the book had been translated into several languages.[131]
In 1900, Ben-Hur became the best-selling American novel of the 19th century, surpassing Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin.[132][133] Amy Lifson, an editor for Humanities, identified it as the most influential Christian book of the 19th century.[1] Others named it one of the best-selling novels of all time.[131] At the time of Ben-Hur’s one hundredth anniversary in 1980, it had “never been out of print”[134] and had been adapted for the stage and several motion pictures.[1][135] One historian, Victor Davis Hanson, has argued that Ben-Hur drew from Wallace’s life, particularly his experiences at Shiloh, and the damage it did to his reputation. The book’s main character, Judah Ben-Hur, accidentally causes injury to a high-ranking Roman commander, for which he and his family suffer tribulations and calumny.[136]
Wallace wrote subsequent novels and biographies, but Ben-Hur remained his most important work. Wallace considered The Prince of India; or, Why Constantinople Fell (1893) as his best novel.[137] He also wrote a biography of President Benjamin Harrison, a fellow Hoosier and Civil War general, and The Wooing of Malkatoon (1898), a narrative poem. Wallace was writing his autobiography when he died in 1905. His wife Susan completed it with the assistance of Mary Hannah Krout, another author from Crawfordsville. It was published posthumously in 1906.[138]
Later years[edit]
Wallace continued to write after his return from the Ottoman Empire. He also patented several of his own inventions, built a seven-story apartment building in Indianapolis, The Blacherne, and drew up plans for a private study at his home in Crawfordsville.[139] Wallace remained active in veterans groups, including writing a speech for the dedication of the battlefield at the Chickamauga.[140]
Wallace’s elaborate writing study, which he described as “a pleasure-house for my soul”,[141] served as his private retreat.[1] Now called the General Lew Wallace Study and Museum, it was built between 1895 and 1898, adjacent to his residence in Crawfordsville, and set in an enclosed park. The study along with three and one-half acres of its grounds were designated a National Historic Landmark in 1976.[142] The property is operated as a museum, open to the public.[1][143] Wallace had a moat on two sides of the Study and stocked it so he could fish from the back porch and a landing. In winter, he would fire up the coal furnace in the Study basement and fish from the windows. He loved fishing so much he invented and patented a special traveler’s fishing pole. After just a few years he had the moat drained as it was negatively affecting the Study foundation and he worried about his grandchildren and neighborhood children falling into the water.
On April 5, 1898, at the outbreak of the Spanish–American War, Wallace, at age seventy-one, offered to raise and lead a force of soldiers, but the war office refused. Undeterred, he went to a local recruiting office and attempted to enlist as a private, but was rejected again, presumably because of his age.[144]
Wallace’s service at the battle of Shiloh continued to haunt him in later life. The debate persisted in book publications, magazine articles, pamphlets, speeches, and in private correspondence.[145] Wallace attended a reunion at Shiloh in 1894, his first return since 1862, and retraced his journey to the battlefield with veterans from the 3rd Division. He returned to Shiloh for a final time in 1901 to walk the battlefield with David W. Reed, the Shiloh Battlefield Commission’s historian, and others. Wallace died before the manuscript of his memoirs was fully completed, and it is unknown whether he would have revised his final account of the battle.[146]
Death[edit]
Wallace died at home in Crawfordsville, on February 15, 1905,[33] of atrophic gastritis.[147] He was seventy-seven years old.[1] Wallace is buried in Crawfordsville Oak Hill Cemetery.[148]
Legacy and honors[edit]
Wallace’s statue in the U.S. Capitol
Wallace was a man of many interests and a lifelong adventure seeker, who remained a persistent, self-confident man of action. He was also impatient and highly sensitive to personal criticisms, especially those related to his command decisions at Shiloh.[149] Despite Wallace’s career in law and politics, combined with years of military and diplomatic service, he achieved his greatest fame as a novelist, most notably for his best-selling biblical tale, Ben-Hur.
Following Wallace’s death, the State of Indiana commissioned the sculptor Andrew O’Connor to create a marble statue of Wallace dressed in a military uniform for the National Statuary Hall Collection in the U.S. Capitol. The statue was unveiled during a ceremony held on January 11, 1910.[150] Wallace is the only novelist honored in the hall.[1] A bronze copy of the statue is installed on the grounds of Wallace’s study in Crawfordsville.[150][151]
Lew Wallace High School opened in 1926 at 415 West 45th Avenue in Gary, Indiana. On June 3, 2014, the Gary School Board voted 4 to 2 to close Lew Wallace, along with five other schools.[152]
A Knights of Pythias lodge was established in Franklin, Indiana at the Masonic Home to be known as the General Lewis Wallace Lodge #2019.
Popular culture[edit]
NASL Indianapolis-based team The Indy Eleven pays homage to the 11th Regiment of Indiana Volunteers, which fought for the Union Army during the Civil War. The inspiration for the name came from Donna Schmink, the Collection Manager at the Indiana War Museum, who, when asked by team officials for ideas on a team name connected to Indiana history, suggested “the Eleventh” in honor of the regiment that valiantly fought under the initial direction of Colonel Lew Wallace.[153]
Film and television[edit]
- Frank Reicher (uncredited) as General Lew Wallace in the film Billy the Kid (1930).
- Berton Churchill as Gov. Wallace in The Big Stampede (1932).
- Joe King (actor) (uncredited) as Governor Lew Wallace in Land Beyond the Law (1937).
- Robert H. Barrat as General Lew Wallace in The Kid from Texas (1950).
- Claude Stroud as Gen. Lew Wallace – New Mexico Governor in I Shot Billy the Kid (1950).
- Otis Garth (uncredited) as Gov. Lew Wallace in The Law vs. Billy the Kid (1954).
- Ralph Moody as Gen. Lew Wallace in Strange Lady in Town (1955).
- Robert Warwick as Governor Wallace in Law of the Plainsman (TV series), episode “Amnesty” (aired April 7, 1960).
- Cameron Mitchell as General Lew Wallace in The Andersonville Trial (TV), which aired May 17, 1970; an adaptation of the 1959 Broadway play by the same name.
- Jason Robards as Governor Wallace in Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid (1973).
- René Auberjonois as Gov. Lew Wallace in Longarm (TV film, 1988).
- Wilford Brimley as Gov. Lew Wallace in Billy the Kid (TNT film, 1989).
- Scott Wilson as Governor Lewis Wallace in the film Young Guns II (1990).
- Brian Merrick as Gen. Lew Wallace in No Retreat from Destiny: The Battle That Rescued Washington (2006 video).
Published works[edit]
Fiction
- The Fair God; or, The Last of the ‘Tzins: A Tale of the Conquest of Mexico (Boston: James R. Osgood and Company, 1873.)[154]
- Commodus: An Historical Play (Crawfordsville, IN: privately published by the author, 1876.) Revised and reissued in the same year.[155]
- Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ (New York: Harper and Brothers, 1880.)[156]
- The First Christmas from Ben-Hur (New York: Harper and Brothers, 1899.)[157]
- The Boyhood of Christ (New York: Harper and Brothers, 1888.)[158]
- The Prince of India; or, Why Constantinople Fell (New York: Harper and Brothers, 1893.) Two volumes.[159]
- The Wooing of Malkatoon (New York: Harper and Brothers, 1898.)[160]
Non-Fiction
- Life of Gen. Ben Harrison (Philadelphia: Hubbard Brothers, 1888.)[161]
- Life and Public Services of Hon. Benjamin Harrison, President of the U.S. With a Concise Biographical Sketch of Hon. Whitelaw Reid, Ex-Minister to France [by Murat Halstad] (Philadelphia: Edgewood Publishing Co., 1892.)
- Lew Wallace: An Autobiography (New York: Harper and Brothers, 1906.) Two volumes.[162]
See also[edit]
- Bibliography of the American Civil War
- Bibliography of Ulysses S. Grant
- List of American Civil War battles
- List of American Civil War generals (Union)
References[edit]
- ^ Jump up to:a b c d e f g h i Amy Lifson (2009). “Ben-Hur: The Book That Shook the World”. Humanities. Washington D.C.: National Endowment for the Humanities. 30 (6). Retrieved April 11, 2017.
- ^ McKee, The Early Life of Lew Wallace, p. 206.
- ^ Woodworth, p. 63.
- ^ Gugin and St. Clair, pp. 82, 85.
- ^ Boomhower, pp. 13–14.
- ^ Stephens, p. 1; Boomhower, pp. 14, 16; McKee, The Early Life of Lew Wallace, p. 207.
- ^ Gugin and St. Clair, pp. 82, 85; Boomhower, p. 19; Stephens, p. 2.
- ^ Morrow, p. 3.
- ^ Boomhower, p. 9 and 15, and Morrow, p. 4.
- ^ Boomhower, p. 17.
- ^ Jump up to:a b Gronert, p. 71.
- ^ Boomhower, pp. 9, 20–21; McKee, The Early Life of Lew Wallace, p. 211.
- ^ Boomhower, p. 22.
- ^ McKee, The Early Life of Lew Wallace, p. 214.
- ^ Stephens, pp. 2–3, 13; Boomhower, pp. 3, 9, 23–26.
- ^ Boomhower, p. 11.
- ^ Stephens, p. 4; Boomhower, p. 3, 26–27; Morrow, p. 6.
- ^ Warner, pp. 536–537; Woodworth, p. 64.
- ^ Jump up to:a b c d Eicher, p. 551.
- ^ Stephens, p. 8.
- ^ “Free Soil Banner”, digitized by the Indianapolis Marion County Public Library.
- ^ Boomhower, p. 35.
- ^ Stephens, p. 10.
- ^ Boomhower, pp. 39–41.
- ^ Morrow, p. 8.
- ^ Stephens, pp. 9, 11, 13; Boomhower, pp. 41, 44.
- ^ Jump up to:a b c Forbes, p. 388.
- ^ Jump up to:a b c d Morrow, p. 9.
- ^ “Indiana State Historic Architectural and Archaeological Research Database (SHAARD)” (Searchable database). Department of Natural Resources, Division of Historic Preservation and Archaeology. Retrieved October 1, 2015. Note: This includes Carol Ann Freese; Nancy Wagner (December 2001). “National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form: Fountain County Courthouse” (PDF). Retrieved October 1, 2015. and Accompanying photographs.
- ^ Stephens, p. 14; Boomhower, pp. 4, 44.
- ^ “Timeline”.
- ^ Morsberger and Morseberger, p. 54.
- ^ Jump up to:a b c d e f g Swansburg, John (March 26, 2013). “The Passion of Lew Wallac