Online Encyclopedia

FRANZ SIGEL (1824–1902)

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Originally appearing in Volume V25, Page 60 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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FRANZ SIGEL (1824–1902)  , German and
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American soldier, was born at Sinsheim, in Baden, on the 18th of November 1824 . He graduated at the military school at Carlsruhe, and became an officer in the
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grand ducal service . He soon became known for revolutionary opinions, and in 1847, after killing an opponent in a duel, he resigned his commission . When the Baden insurrection broke out, Sigel was a leader on the revolutionary side in the brief
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campaign of 1848, and then took
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refuge in
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Switzerland . In the following
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year he returned to Baden and took a conspicuous
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part in the more serious operations of the second outbreak under General Louis Mieroslawski (1814–1878.) Sigel subsequently lived in Switzerland, England and the
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United States, whither he emigrated in 1852, the usual
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life of a
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political exile, working in turn as journalist and schoolmaster, and both at New York and St Louis, whither he removed in 1858, he conducted military
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journals . When the American
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Civil War broke out in 1861, Sigel was active in raising and training Federal volunteer corps, and took a prominent part in the struggle for the possession of
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Missouri . He became in May a brigadier-general U.S.V,, and served with Nathaniel Lyon at Wilson's Creek and with J . C . Fremont in the advance on Spring-field in the autumn . In 1862 he took a conspicuous part in the desperately fought
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battle of
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Pea Ridge, which definitely secured Missouri for the Federals . He was promoted to be major-general of
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volunteers, was ordered to Virginia, and was soon placed in command of the I. corps of Pope's " Army of Virginia." In this capacity he took part in the second Bull Run campaign, and his corps displayed the utmost gallantry in the unsuccessful attacks on Bald Hill . Up to the beginning of 1863, when
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bad
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health obliged him to take leave of absence, Sigel remained in command of his own (now called the XI.) corps and the XII., the two forming a " Grand Division." In
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June 1863 he was in command of large forces in Pennsylvania, to make head against Lee's second invasion of
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Northern territory .

In 1864 he was placed in command of the corps in the

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Shenandoah Valley, but was defeated by General John C . Breckinridge at
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Newmarket (15th of May), and was superseded . Subsequently he was in command of the Harper's Ferry garrison at the time of Early's
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raid upon Washington and made a brilliant defence of his
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post(
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July 4-5, 1864) . He resigned his commission in May 1865, and became editor of a German journal in Baltimore,
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Maryland . In 1867 he removed to New York City, and in 1869 was the unsuccessful Republican
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candidate for secretary of state of New York . He was appointed
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collector of
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internal revenue in May 1871, and in the following
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October he was elected
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register of New York City by Republicans and " reform Democrats." From 1885 to 1889, having previously become a Democrat, he was pension agent for New York City, on the appointment of President Cleveland . General Sigel's last years were de-voted to the editorship of the New York Monthly, a German-American periodical . He died in New York City on the 21st of August 1902 . A monument (by Karl Bitter) in his honour was unveiled in
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Riverside Drive, New York City, in October 1907 .

End of Article: FRANZ SIGEL (1824–1902)
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