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BRAXTON See also: American soldier, was See also: born in See also: Warren county, See also: North Carolina, on the 22nd of See also: March 1817
.
He graduated at the
See also: United States military See also: academy in 1837, and as an artillery officer served in the See also: Seminole See also: wars of 1837 and 1841, and under General See also: Taylor in Mexico
.
For gallant conduct at Fort
See also: Brown,
See also: Monterey and Buena Vista, he received the brevets of captain, major and See also: lieutenant-colonel
.
He resigned from the See also: regular army on the 3rd of See also: January 1856, and retired to his See also: plantation in See also: Louisiana
.
From 1859 to 1861 he was See also: commissioner of the See also: board of public See also: works of the See also: state
.
When in 1861 the See also: Civil War began, See also: Bragg was made a brigadier-general in the Confederate service, and assigned to command at See also: Pensacola
.
In See also: February 1862, having meanwhile become major-general, he took up a command in the Army of the See also: Mississippi, and he was See also: present at the See also: battle of See also: Shiloh (See also: April)
.
The vacancy created by the See also: death of See also: Sidney See also: Johnston at that battle was filled by the promotion of Bragg to full general's See also: rank, and he succeeded General Beauregard when that officer retired from the Western command
.
In the autumn of 1862 he led a bold advance from Eastern See also: Tennessee across See also: Kentucky to See also: Louisville, but after temporary successes he was forced to retire before See also: Buell, and after the battle of See also: Perryville (8th See also: October) retired into Tennessee
.
Though the material results of his See also: campaign were considerable, he was bitterly censured, and his removal from his command was urged
.
But the See also: personal favour of Jefferson See also: Davis kept him, as it had placed him, at the See also: head of the central army, and on the 31st of See also: December 1862 and 2nd of January 1863 he fought the indecisive battle of See also: Murfreesboro (or See also: Stone
See also: river) against Rosecrans, Buell's successor
.
In the campaign of 1863 Rosecrans constantly outmanoeuvred the See also: Con-federates, and forced them back to the border of See also: Georgia
.
Bragg, however, inflicted a crushing defeat on his opponent at Chickamauga ( See also: September 19—20) and for a See also: time besieged the Union forces in See also: Chattanooga
.
But enormous forces under See also: Grant were concentrated upon the threatened spot, and the
See also: great battle of Chattanooga (See also: November 23—25) ended in the rout of the Confederates
.
Bragg was now deprived of his command, but President Davis made him his military adviser, and in that capacity he served during 1864
.
In the autumn of that See also: year he led an inferior force from North Carolina to Georgia to oppose Sherman's march
.
In February 1865 he joined Johnston, and he was thus included in the surrender of that officer to Sherman
.
After the war he became chief engineer to the state of See also: Alabama, and supervised improvements in See also: Mobile harbour
.
He died suddenly at See also: Galveston, See also: Texas, on the 27th of September 1876
.
General Bragg, in spite of his want of success, was unquestionably a brave and skilful officer
.
But he was a severe See also: martinet, and rarely in full See also: accord with the See also: senior See also: officers under his orders, the consequent See also: friction often acting unfavourably on the conduct of the operations
.
His See also: brother, See also: THOMAS BRAGG (1810-1872), was governor of North Carolina 1855—1859, U.S. senator 1859—1861, and attorney-general in the Confederate
See also: cabinet from Nov
.
1861 to March 186i
.
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