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General William
Starke Rosecrans |
William S.
Rosecrans was born Sept.6, 1819 at Delaware City, Ohio, the son of Crandell Rosecrans and
Jane Hopkins and the great-grandson of Stephen Hopkins, colonial Governor of Rhode Island
and a signer of the Declaration of Independence. Hopkins also co-authored, with John
Adams, the draft of the Articles of Confederation.
Rosecrans was a graduate of the Class of 1842 at
West Point ( 5th in the class of 56). Among his classmates were: James Longstreet, Richard
H. Anderson, Abner Doubleday, John Newton, George Sykes, Seth Williams, Lafayette McLaws,
Alexander P. Stewart, John Pope, D.H. Hill, and Earl Van Dorn. He was the roommate of
James Longstreet and A.P. Stewart.

Rosecrans was assigned engineering duty upon
graduation but resigned from the Army in 1854, and became an architect and a civil
engineer. His rise in business was astounding. He took over direction of mining in western
Virginia (today West Virginia) where his geological surveys pointed with remarkable
accuracy to profitable new veins of coal. He became President of a navigation company
formed to transport coal. He was also an inventor. Numbered among his inventions were
odorless oil, a round lamp wick, a short practical lamp chimney, and a new and economical
method of manufacturing soap. While in the laboratory a safety lamp exploded and burned
him terribly. He was bedridden for 18 months recovering from the burns. Just as his
recovery from burns were coming to a conclusion the Civil War broke out.
His first duties in the war were for the state
of Ohio when he became the drillmaster for the 'Marion Rifles'. After which he became the
engineering officer that laid the plan for Camp Dennison, Ohio and eventually became the
Commanding Officer of the 23rd Ohio Volunteer Infantry. Among other members of the 23rd
Ohio were Rutherford B. Hayes, William McKinley, and Stanley Matthews, a future Associate
Justice of the Supreme Court.
Rosecrans was soon appointed Brigadier General
in the regular Army and was a successful commander at Rich Mountain, (West) Virginia.
After the Battle of Rich Mountain, George McClellan
received much credit for the victory there and was promoted to Commanding General of the
Army of the Potomac - and eventually General-in-Chief of the Union Armies. Yet it was
Rosecrans who developed and carried out the plans that actually gained the victory at Rich
Mountain, a fact that McClellan failed to credit in the official reports. Thus Rosecrans
refused to go east with McClellan and requested a transfer to the west.
In the west, Rosecrans was placed in charge of
the left wing of the Army of the Mississippi at Iuka and Corinth. At both he did ably.
After Corinth animosities between Grant and Rosecrans arose. Grant blamed Rosecrans for
not pursuing the Confederate Army after Corinth and Rosecrans placed blame on Grant for
not sending reinforcements during and immediately after the Battle of Corinth.
After Corinth, Rosecrans was given command of
the XIV Corps and promotion to Major General. The promotion was back dated to March 1862
so that Rosecrans would outrank Major General Thomas. As Commanding General of the XIV
Corps Rosecrans secured a victory at Stones River (Murfreesboro) and immediately began the
reorganization of the XIV Corps into the Army of the Cumberland. He then embarked upon the
Tullahoma Campaign and ousted the Confederates from Chattanooga with fewer then 500
casualties in the whole army.
Rosecrans was loved by the men of his Army but
was harsh on his officers. A very problematic fault of Rosecrans was that once a battle
began he became very excitable which led him to stutter and become very difficult to
understand. Another problem of Rosecrans was he would micro-manage the movements of units
himself instead of using the chain of command to direct movements.
These problems were never more apparent than at
Chickamauga. Rosecrans issued an order to General Wood "to close in and support his
left." This order created a hole in the Union line which coincided with Longstreet's
attack and led to the Confederate victory. Because of the defeat, Rosecrans was relieved
of command of the Army of the Cumberland and would eventually be given command of the
Department of Missouri until wars end.
Rosecrans resigned from the Army in 1867 to
resume his career in business. He eventually would become Minister to Mexico, serve in
Congress representing California, and register of the Treasury. William S. Rosecrans died
March 11, 1898 at Redondo, California and is buried at Arlington National Cemetery.