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Ulysses S. Grant
Grant
Historical Figure
Nationality: United States
Year of Birth: 1822
Year of Death: 1885
Cause of Death: Throat cancer
Religion: Methodist
Occupation: Soldier, Businessman, Politician, Author of Non-Fiction
Spouse: Julia Dent
Children: Frederick, Ulysses, Jr., Nellie, Jesse
Relatives: Ulysses S. Grant III (grandson)
Military Branch: United States Army (Mexican-American War),
Union

Army (American Civil War)

Political Party: Republican Party
Political Office(s): President of the United States
Fictional Appearances:
The Guns of the South
POD: January 17, 1864
Type of Appearance: Direct
Military Branch: US Army (Second American Revolution)
Southern Victory
POD: September 10, 1862
Appearance(s): How Few Remain;
Blood and Iron
Type of Appearance: Direct (HFR); Posthumous reference (B&I)
Date of Death: Unrevealed
Military Branch: US Army (War of Secession)

Ulysses Simpson Grant (born Hiram Ulysses Grant, April 27, 1822 - July 23, 1885) was an American general and the eighteenth President of the United States (1869–1877). He achieved international fame as the leading Union general in the American Civil War, proving to be the North's most aggressive general. His tenure as general is treated more favorably by historians than his presidency, which was marred by corruption. Indeed, contemporary critics coined the word "Grantism" to describe government corruption.

After leaving office, Grant was very nearly destitute, but was able to provide for his family by publishing his memoirs. He died of throat cancer two days after completing them.

Literary comment[]

Grant is reported to have said about his lack of appreciation for music, "I know only two tunes. One is "Yankee Doodle" and the other isn't." In The Guns of the South, Grant himself says this line.[1] In The War Between the Provinces: Sentry Peak, Grant's analog General Bart makes a similar statement about the Royal Hymn of Detina.[2]

Ulysses S. Grant in The Guns of the South[]

Ulysses S. Grant's great achievement in 1862-63 was to seize control of the Mississippi River by defeating a series of uncoordinated Confederate armies and by capturing Vicksburg in July 1863. After a victory at Chattanooga in late 1863, Abraham Lincoln made him General-in-Chief of all Union armies.

Grant's intended strategy was to simply club the Confederacy into submission by attacking on all fronts and continuing to advance even if he suffered tactical defeats. He attached himself to the Army of the Potomac, intending to take personal command. His goal was not to advance on Richmond as previously generals had done, but to target the Confederate's main field army.[3]

At the start of the campaign, the Union Army was ambushed in the Wilderness by C.S. General Robert E. Lee, who'd somehow gained advanced knowledge of his plans. The battlefield nullified Grant's artillery, and the superiority in numbers came to naught due to the AK-47s supplied by the Rivington Men to Lee. The new repeaters meant the Confederates could absorb all the bodies Grant threw at them, completely nullifying his strategy. Grant was forced to retreat, although his skillful use of artillery kept the Army of the Potomac from being completely destroyed.[4]

A second defeat at the Battle of Bealeton allowed Lee to advance on and capture Washington City, so that the C.S. won the Second American Revolution.[5] Grant met with Lee for the first time since the Mexican-American War on the White House lawn as the Confederate States prepared to return Washington City to United States control after a brief occupation. Grant held no personal animosity against Lee, instead displaying a gruff but respectful manner.

Grant later served as an Election Commissioner during the Kentucky and Missouri state-wide referendum on whether they would remain with the Union or join the Confederacy. Although he had a reputation as a heavy drinker, Grant remained abstinent during the election campaign, preferring coffee at dinner with fellow commissioner Robert E. Lee.[6] Grant's battles against Lee during the war still haunted him, and Lee privately believed they would continue to for the rest of Grant's life.

During the campaign, Grant meticulously observed his duties as a joint commissioner with Lee, though both men continued to put the interests of their respective countries first. Grant's avoidance of alcohol ended the night of the vote; when it became clear that Kentucky had voted to secede and join the C.S.A., Grant gave up and drank himself into a stupor.[7]

In 1868, Lee had the opportunity to review Grant's Overland Campaign as it had taken place in the world the Rivington Men had come from.[8]

Ulysses S. Grant in Southern Victory[]

Ulysses S. Grant came out of retirement to fight in the War of Secession when it began in 1861. Throughout the war, he was notably the most successful Union General against the Confederate States with his most famous battle at Shiloh. When the United States lost the war, he left the Union Army and tried his hand at civilian life, but his alcoholism was detrimental this endeavor.

At the outset of the Second Mexican War in 1881, he was one of the few white members of a crowd in St. Louis addressed by Frederick Douglass.[9] Later generations primarily remembered him as having died a drunk.[10] Many quietly speculated Grant could have done more if he had not been shelved early, or if his forces had been transferred from the west to repair the disasters in the east.

See Also[]

References[]

  1. The Guns of the South, pg. 201, mmpb.
  2. Sentry Peak, pgs. 264-265.
  3. The Guns of the South, pgs. 100-104.
  4. Ibid., pgs. 140-150.
  5. Ibid., pgs. 205-210.
  6. Ibid., pgs. 296-307.
  7. Ibid., pgs. 313-314.
  8. Ibid., pg. 431.
  9. How Few Remain, pg. 65.
  10. Blood and Iron, pg. 630.
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