Saturday, October 12, 2019
Robert E. Lee :: essays research papers
 The idol of the South to this day, Virginian Robert E. Lee  had some difficulty in adjusting to the new form of warfare  that unfolded with the Civil war, but this did not prevent  him from keeping the Union armies in Virginia at bay for  almost three years. The son of Revolutionary War hero  "Light Horse" Harry Lee-who fell into disrepute in his later  years attended West Point and graduated second in his  class. During his four years at the military academy he did  not earn a single demerit and served as the cadet corps'  adjutant. Upon his 1829 graduation he was posted to the  engineers. Before the Mexican War he served on  engineering projects in Georgia, Virginia, and New York.  During the war he served on the staffs of John Wool and  Winfield Scott. Particularly distinguishing himself scouting  for and guiding troops, he won three brevets and was  slightly wounded at Chapultepec.   Following a stint in Baltimore Harbor he became  superintendent of the military academy in 1852. When the  mounted arm was expanded in 1855, Lee accepted the  lieutenant colonelcy of the 2nd Cavalry in order to escape  from the painfully slow promotion in the engineers. Ordered  to western Texas, he served with his regiment until the  1857 death of his father-in-law forced him to ask for a  series of leaves to settle the estate.  In 1859 he was called upon to lead a force of marines, to  join with the militia on the scene, to put an end to John  Brown's Harper's Ferry Raid. Thereafter he served again in  Texas until summoned to Washington in 1861 by Winfield  Scott who tried to retain Lee in the U. S. service. But the  Virginian rejected the command of the Union's field forces  on the day after Virginia seceded. He then accepted an  invitation to visit Governor John Letcher in Virginia. His  resignation as colonel, 1st Cavalry-to which he had recently  been promoted-was accepted on April 25, 1861.  His Southern assignments included: major general,  Virginia's land and naval forces (April 23, 1861);  commanding Virginia forces (April 23 July 1861); brigadier  general, CSA (May 14, 186 1); general, CSA (from June  14, 186 1); commanding Department of Northwestern  Virginia (late July-October 1861); commanding  Department of South Carolina, Georgia and Florida  (November 8, 186 1-March 3, 1862); and commanding  Army of Northern Virginia June 1, 1862-April 9, 1865).   In charge of Virginia's fledgling military might, he was  mainly involved in organizational matters. As a Confederate  brigadier general, and later full general, he was in charge of  supervising all Southern forces in Virginia. In the first  summer of the war he was given his first field command in    					    
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