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ALBERT SIDNEY JOHNSTON (1803–1862)

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Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 473 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ALBERT SIDNEY JOHNSTON (1803–1862)  ,
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American
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Con-federate general in the
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Civil War, was born at Washington, Mason county,
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Kentucky, on the 3rd of
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February 1803 . He graduated from West Point in 1826, and served for eight years in the U.S.
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infantry as a
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company officer, adjutant, and staff officer . In 1834 he resigned his commission, emigrated in 1836 to
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Texas, then a republic, and joined its army as a private . His rise was very rapid, and before long he was serving as commanderin-chief in preference to General Felix Huston, with whom he fought a duel . From 1838 to 184o he was Texan secretary for war, and in 1839 he led a successful expedition against the Cherokee Indians . From 184o to the outbreak of the Mexican War he lived in retirement on his
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farm, but in 1846 he led a regiment of Texan
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volunteers in the field, and at
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Monterey, as a staff officer, he had three horses shot under him . In 1849 he returned to the
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United States army as major and paymaster, and in 1855 became colonel of the 2nd U.S . Cavalry (afterwards 5th), in which his lieut.-colonel was Robert E . Lee, and his majors were Hardee and Thomas . In 1857 he commanded the expedition sent against the
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Mormons, and performed his difficult and dangerous
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mission so successfully that the
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objects of the expedition were attained without
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blood-
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shed . He was rewarded with the brevet of brigadier-general . At the outbreak of the Civil War in 1861 Johnston, then in command of the Pacific department, resigned his commission and made his way to Richmond, where Pres .

Jefferson Davis, whom he had known at West Point, at once made him a full general in the Confederate army and assigned him to command the department of Kentucky . Here he had to guard a long and weak
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line from the
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Mississippi to the Alleghany Mountains, which was dangerously advanced on account of the
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political necessity of covering friendly country . The first serious advance of the Federals forced him back at once, and he was freely criticized and denounced for what, in ignorance of the facts, the
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Southern press and
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people regarded as a weak and irresolute defence . Johnston himself, who had entered upon the Civil War with the reputation of being the foremost soldier on either side,
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bore with fortitude the reproaches of his countrymen, and Davis loyally supported his old friend . Johnston then marched to join Beauregard at Corinth,
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Miss., and with the united forces took the offensive against Grant's army at Pittsburg Landing . The
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battle of Shiloh (q v.) took place on the 6th and 7th of
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April, 1862 . The Federals were completely surprised, and Johnston was in the full tide of success when he fell mortally wounded . He died a few minutes afterwards . President Davis said, in his message to the Confederate Congress, " Without doing injustice to the living, it may safely be said that our loss is irreparable," and the subsequent
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history of the war in the west went far to prove the truth of his eulogy . His son, WILLIAM PRESTON JOHNSTON (1831-1899), who served on the staff of General Johnston and subsequently on that of President Davis, was a distinguished professor and president of Tulane University . His chief
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work is the
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Life of General Albert Sidney Johnston (1878), a most valuable and exhaustive biography .

End of Article: ALBERT SIDNEY JOHNSTON (1803–1862)
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