(Redirected from Alexander R. Lawton)
'Alexander Robert Lawton' (
November 4,
1818 –
July 2,
1896) was a
lawyer,
politician,
diplomat and
brigadier general in the
Confederate States Army during the
American Civil War.
Early life
Lawton was born in the
Beaufort District of
South Carolina. He was the son of Alexander James Lawton and Martha Mosse. He graduated from the
United States Military Academy in
1839, placing 13th out of 31 in his class. He served as a
second lieutenant in the 1st U.S. Artillery until resigning his commission in
1840 to study law. He attended the
Harvard Law School, graduating in
1842. He settled in
Savannah, Georgia, and entered the fields of law, railroad administration and state politics.
Civil War
He favored Georgia's
secession and became
Colonel of the 1st Georgia Volunteers. He commanded the Savannah troops that seized
Fort Pulaski, the first conflict of the war in Georgia. He was commissioned a brigadier general in the Confederate army on
April 13,
1861, and commanded the forces guarding Georgia's seacoast before being reassigned to
Virginia. He effectively led his
brigade during
Stonewall Jackson's
Shenandoah Valley Campaign, the
Seven Days' Battles and the
Second Battle of Manassas. His last field service was at
Sharpsburg, where he commanded the
division of the wounded
Richard S. Ewell. Lawton was seriously wounded early in the morning of
September 17,
1862, while defending his portion of the
Army of Northern Virginia's line. Initially carried from the field to a temporary hospital, he spent months at home recuperating.
In August 1863, Lawton became the
Confederacy's second
Quartermaster General. Although he brought energy and resourcefulness to the position, he was unable to solve the problem of material shortages and poorly-regulated railroads.
Post-bellum career
In the years after the Civil War, Lawton became increasingly important as a political figure in Georgia, serving in various administrative posts. He lost the
1880 election for the
U.S. Senate in an election which seemed to represent a victory of the "New South" over the "Old South." He was chosen President of the
American Bar Association in
1882. Five years later, he was appointed Minister to
Austria. Lawton died in Clifton Springs, New York.
References and links
★ ''Appleton's Cyclopedia of American Biography'', edited by James Grant Wilson and John Fiske. Six volumes, New York: D. Appleton and Company, 1887-1889.
★
Photo Gallery of Lawton
★
On-line biography