Everything about Fitzhugh Lee totally explained
Fitzhugh Lee (
November 19,
1835 –
April 18,
1905), nephew of
Robert E. Lee, was a
Confederate cavalry general in the
American Civil War,
Governor of Virginia, diplomat, and
U.S. Army general in the
Spanish-American War.
Early life
Lee was born at "Clermont," in
Fairfax County, Virginia. He was the grandson of
"Light Horse Harry" Lee, and the nephew of
Robert E. Lee. His father,
Sydney Smith Lee, was a fleet captain under
Commodore Perry in
Japanese waters and rose to the rank of
Commodore; his mother was a granddaughter of
George Mason and the sister of
James Murray Mason. Graduating from the
U.S. Military Academy in
1856, he was commissioned a
second lieutenant in the
2nd U.S. Cavalry, which was commanded by
Colonel Albert Sidney Johnston, and in which his uncle, Robert E. Lee, was
lieutenant colonel. As a
cavalry subaltern, he distinguished himself by his gallant conduct in actions against the
Comanches in
Texas, and was severely wounded in a fight in Nescutunga, Texas, in 1859. In May 1860, he was appointed instructor of cavalry at
West Point, but resigned his commission upon the
secession of Virginia.
Civil War
Lee joined the
Confederate States Army as a lieutenant of cavalry and served at first as a staff officer to
Brig. Gen. Richard S. Ewell at the
First Battle of Bull Run. He was promoted to lieutenant colonel of the 1st Virginia Cavalry in August 1861, serving under Colonel
J.E.B. Stuart. Lee became colonel of the regiment in March 1862 and was promoted to
brigadier general on
July 24,
1862. During the
Northern Virginia Campaign, Lee received notoriety by arriving late for a concentration of cavalry, which allowed Federal cavalry to raid Stuart's headquarters and capture his famous plumed hat and cape. However, during the subsequent Confederate raid on Catlett's Station, he captured the headquarters tent and dress uniform of
Union Maj. Gen.
John Pope. Lee gave Pope's coat to Stuart as compensation for the hat he'd lost.
Lee performed well in the
Maryland Campaign of 1862, covering the Confederate infantry's withdrawal from
South Mountain, delaying the Union Army advance to
Sharpsburg, Maryland, before the
Battle of Antietam, and covering his army's recrossing of the
Potomac River into Virginia. He conducted the cavalry action of
Kelly's Ford (
March 17,
1863) with skill and success, where his 400 troopers captured 150 men and horses with a loss of only 14 men. In the
Battle of Chancellorsville in May 1863, Lee's reconnaissance found that the Union Army's right flank was "in the air," which allowed the successful flanking attack by Maj. Gen.
Thomas J. "Stonewall" Jackson, a movement led by Lee's cavalry.
After Chancellorsville, Lee was incapacitated by inflammatory rheumatism, missing a month of action, which included the significant cavalry operations at the
Battle of Brandy Station. He recovered in time to lead a brigade in Jeb Stuart's ride around the Union Army in the early days of the
Gettysburg Campaign, with his most significant contribution being at the
Battle of Carlisle. During the
Battle of Gettysburg, his brigade fought unsuccessfully in the action at
East Cavalry Field. Stuart's report singled out no officer in his command for praise except Fitz Lee, who he said was "one of the finest cavalry leaders on the continent, and richly [entitled] to promotion." Lee was promoted to major general on
August 3,
1863.
In the
Overland and
Petersburg campaigns of 1864, he was constantly employed as a
divisional commander under Stuart, and, after Stuart's death, under Maj. Gen.
Wade Hampton. Hampton, who had been Lee's peer for much of the war, was promoted to replace Stuart due to his seniority and greater level of experience; some observers at the time had cynically expected Robert E. Lee's nephew to receive the command.
Lee took part in
Lt. Gen. Jubal A. Early's campaign against Maj. Gen.
Philip Sheridan in the
Shenandoah Valley, and at
Third Winchester (
September 19,
1864) three horses were shot under him and he was severely wounded. When General Hampton was sent to assist General
Joseph E. Johnston in
North Carolina, the command of the whole of Robert E. Lee's cavalry devolved upon Fitzhugh Lee on
March 29,
1865, but the surrender at
Appomattox followed quickly upon the opening of the campaign. Fitzhugh Lee himself led the last charge of the Confederates on
April 9 that year at
Farmville, Virginia.
Postbellum
Stafford County, Virginia, and was conspicuous in his efforts to reconcile the Southern people to the issue of the war, which he regarded as a final settlement of the questions at issue. In 1875, he attended the
Battle of Bunker Hill centennial at
Boston and delivered a remarkable address. In 1885, he was a member of the board of visitors of West Point, and from 1886 to 1890 was
governor of Virginia.
In April 1896, Lee was appointed consul-general at
Havana by
President Grover Cleveland, with duties of a diplomatic and military character added to the usual consular business. In this post (in which he was retained by President
William McKinley until 1898) he was from the first called upon to deal with a situation of great difficulty, which culminated with the destruction of the warship
USS Maine. Upon the declaration of war between
Spain and the United States, he re-entered the army. He was one of the three ex-Confederate general officers who were made major generals of United States Volunteers. Fitzhugh Lee commanded the VII Army Corps, but took no part in the actual operations in
Cuba. He was military governor of Havana and
Pinar del Rio in 1899, subsequently commanded the Department of the
Missouri, and retired as a brigadier general, U.S. Army in 1901. Lee was an early leader of the committee for the
Jamestown Exposition, which was held at
Sewell's Point on
Hampton Roads in 1907.
Lee died in
Washington, D.C., and is buried in
Hollywood Cemetery,
Richmond, Virginia.
Lee wrote the article about Robert E. Lee in the
Great Commanders series (1894), and
Cuba's Struggle Against Spain (1899).
Further Information
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