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facts about benjamin mcculloch.html

34 Facts About Benjamin McCulloch

facts about benjamin mcculloch.html1.

Benjamin McCulloch was born November 11,1811, in Rutherford County, Tennessee, one of twelve children and the fourth son of Alexander McCulloch and Frances Fisher LeNoir.

2.

Benjamin McCulloch's mother was a daughter of a prominent Virginian planter.

3.

The Benjamin McCulloch family had been wealthy, politically influential, and socially prominent in North Carolina before the American Revolution, but Alexander had wasted much of his inheritance and was unable even to educate his sons.

4.

Benjamin McCulloch reached St Louis just too late to join the fur trappers headed for the mountains for the season.

5.

Benjamin McCulloch then tried to join a freight company heading for Santa Fe as a muleskinner, but was told they had a full complement.

6.

Benjamin McCulloch moved on to Wisconsin to investigate lead-mining, but found all the best claims already staked by the large mining companies.

7.

Benjamin McCulloch's illness prevented him from arriving in San Antonio until after the Alamo had already fallen.

8.

Benjamin McCulloch joined the Texas army under Sam Houston in its retreat to east Texas.

9.

Benjamin McCulloch made deadly use of his cannon against the Mexican positions and received a battlefield commission as first lieutenant.

10.

Benjamin McCulloch returned a few months later with a company of thirty volunteers which he had placed under the command of his friend, Robert Crockett, David Crockett's son.

11.

Benjamin McCulloch acquired a reputation as an Indian fighter, favoring shotguns, pistols, and Bowie knives to the regulation saber and carbine.

12.

The campaign was contentious, and Benjamin McCulloch fought a rifle duel the next year against Colonel Reuben Ross, resulting in a wound that left his right arm crippled for life.

13.

Ben considered the matter closed, but it flared up again the following year, this time involving Henry Benjamin McCulloch, who killed Ross with a pistol.

14.

In 1842, Benjamin McCulloch went back to surveying and intermittent military service.

15.

Benjamin McCulloch then served as a scout for Captain Hays' Rangers.

16.

Captain Benjamin McCulloch introduced us to his officers and many of his men, who appeared orderly and well-mannered people.

17.

In 1845, Benjamin McCulloch was elected from Gonzales County to the first Texas state legislature following its entry into the union.

18.

Benjamin McCulloch subsequently was named chief of scouts under Gen.

19.

Benjamin McCulloch led his scouting company as mounted infantry at the Battle of Monterrey and his expert reconnaissance work preceding the Battle of Buena Vista probably saved Taylor's army from disaster.

20.

Benjamin McCulloch was appointed US marshal for the Eastern District of Texas in 1852, serving throughout the Pierce and Buchanan administrations.

21.

Benjamin McCulloch set up his headquarters at Little Rock, and began piecing together an Army of the West, with regiments from Texas, Arkansas, and Louisiana.

22.

Benjamin McCulloch disagreed strongly with General Sterling Price of Missouri, but with the assistance of Brigadier-General Albert Pike, he was able to build alliances for the Confederacy with the Cherokee, Choctaw, and Creek nations.

23.

When Van Dorn launched an expedition against St Louis, a strategy Benjamin McCulloch strongly opposed, it was again Benjamin McCulloch's reconnaissance that contributed most to what little success Van Dorn's plan was able to achieve.

24.

Benjamin McCulloch commanded the Confederate right wing at the Battle of Pea Ridge, Arkansas, and on March 7,1862, after much maneuvering his troops overran a key Union artillery battery.

25.

Union resistance stiffened late in the morning and as Benjamin McCulloch rode forward to scout out enemy positions, he was shot out of the saddle and died instantly.

26.

Benjamin McCulloch always disliked army uniforms and was wearing a black velvet civilian suit and Wellington boots at the time of his death.

27.

Benjamin McCulloch's body was buried on the field at Pea Ridge, but was removed with other victims of the battle to a cemetery in Little Rock.

28.

Benjamin McCulloch was later reinterred in the Texas State Cemetery in Austin; the gravesite is in the cemetery's Republic Hill section, Row N, No 4.

29.

Benjamin McCulloch's papers are housed at the Dolph Briscoe Center for American History at the University of Texas at Austin.

30.

Benjamin McCulloch is one of thirty men inducted into the Texas Ranger Hall of Fame at Fort Fisher, Waco.

31.

Camp Ben Benjamin McCulloch was established near Austin in 1896 as a reunion site for the United Confederate Veterans and is the last such site still owned by the UCV's descendant group, the Sons and Daughters of the Confederacy.

32.

Several other members of Benjamin McCulloch's family followed him to Texas, including his mother.

33.

Benjamin McCulloch died in Ellis County in 1866 at the home of another of her sons, John C McCulloch, who had been a captain in the Confederate army.

34.

Benjamin McCulloch's remains were exhumed in 1938 by the State of Texas and reinterred beside those of Gen.