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  1. 9 de jul. de 2019 · Henry Halleck - The Civil War Begins: An increasingly prominent citizen, Halleck was appointed a major general in the California militia and briefly served as president of the Atlantic & Pacific Railroad. With the outbreak of the Civil War in 1861, Halleck promptly pledged his loyalty and services to the Union cause despite his Democratic ...

  2. 17 de mar. de 2024 · Henry Halleck was promoted to first lieutenant on January 1, 1845. Henry Halleck served in California during the Mexican-American War (1846 – 1848). Henry Halleck served as military governor of California from August 13, 1847, to December 20, 1849. Henry Halleck was promoted to the rank of brevet captain on May 1, 1847.

  3. 29 de may. de 2018 · Henry Wager Halleck. Henry Wager Halleck (1815-1872) was named General-in-Chief of the United States Union forces during the Civil War by President Abraham Lincoln to replace General George Brinton McClellan and was replaced, in turn, by General Ulysses S. Grant.. Many Civil War historians regard Halleck's military successes as unwarranted credit for the strategies of such subordinates as ...

  4. Henry Halleck was born in Westernville, New York, on 16 January 1815. He was educated at Hudson Academy, and received a Bachelor of Arts degree from Union College. He then graduated from the U.S. Military Academy in 1839 and was commissioned in the Corps of Engineers. Halleck delivered a series of lectures which were eventually published under ...

  5. Brevet Captain Henry Wager Halleck, the Military Secretary of States, was there and in a lone measure its brains because he had given more studious thought to the subject than any other, and General Riley had instructed him to help frame the new constitution. The convention adopted the Constitution on October 10th and adjourned on October 13, 1849.

  6. Henry Wager Halleck was one of the most prominent Union generals in the American Civil War. Though primarily remembered for his bureaucratic leadership, poor handling of troops in the field, and often prickly relationships with subordinate army commanders, Halleck had a first-class mind that affected the course of the Civil War based on his first experience of large-scale command in Missouri.

  7. A major Union army had suffered a bloody setback. President Abraham Lincoln was consumed with grief and worry, and fellow Republicans in the Senate were demanding the dismissal of the cabinet and Commanding General Henry W. Halleck. Lincoln hurried to Halleck’s house, taking with him Herman Haupt, the Union railroad coordinator, who had just ...