'Daniel Smith Donelson' (
June 23,
1801 –
April 17,
1863) was a
Confederate general during the
American Civil War.
One of the three sons of Samuel and Mary Donelson, Daniel Smith Donelson was born in
Sumner County, Tennessee. His older brother was
Andrew Jackson Donelson, named after their uncle,
President Andrew Jackson. Andrew Jackson Donelson would be the private secretary to Jackson during his presidency and a
vice presidential candidate in his own right.
In 1821, Donelson entered
West Point, and graduated in 1825, becoming an
United States Army officer. He resigned his commission only half a year later, on
January 22,
1826, to become a planter in Sumner County. He was also a member of the
militia in
Tennessee, starting as a brigade major in 1827 and being promoted to brigadier general in 1829.
In 1834, Donelson resigned his commission in the Tennessee
militia and moved to
Florida, again working as a planter. His stay there was brief, however, and he moved back to Tennessee two years later, still a planter. In 1841, Donelson became a member of the
Tennessee House of Representatives. He left after one two-year term, but returned twelve years later, in 1855, this time rising to the office of Speaker.
With the outbreak of the Civil War in 1861, Donelson volunteered for the Tennessee militia, leaving behind both of his careers as a planter and as Speaker of the Tennessee House of Representatives. He was returned to his previous rank of
brigadier general in the militia and that May approved the location of
Fort Donelson, which was named in his honor. After Tennessee joined the Confederacy, he became a brigadier general in the Confederate Army on
July 9,
1861. In the following two years, Donelson was active in several campaigns, fighting at the
Battle of Murfreesboro, and eventually rising to command of the department of East Tennessee. He was promoted to
major general on
April 22,
1863, less than a week after his death near
Knoxville, Tennessee. He was buried in the Presbyterian Cemetery in
Hendersonville, Tennessee.
References
; Books
:
★
Generals in Gray: Lives of the Confederate Commanders, , Ezra J., Warner, Louisiana State University Press, 1959, ISBN 0-8071-0823-5
; Websites
:
★
The History
:
★
Major General Daniel S. Donelson, P.A.C.S.