
Lafayette McLaws
'Lafayette McLaws' (
January 15,
1821 –
July 24,
1897) was a
U.S. Army officer and a
Confederate general in the
American Civil War.
Early life
McLaws, who pronounced his first name
IPA: , was born in
Augusta, Georgia. He graduated from the
U.S. Military Academy in 1842 and served as an
infantry officer in the
Mexican-American War, in the West, and in the
Utah War to suppress the
Mormon uprising. While at
Jefferson Barracks, Missouri, he married Emily Allison Taylor, the niece of
Zachary Taylor.
Civil War
At the start of the Civil War, resigning as a U.S. Army
captain, McLaws was commissioned a
major in the
Confederate States Army. He was quickly promoted to
colonel of the
10th Georgia Infantry regiment; then quickly again to
brigadier general in
brigade and
division command in the
Seven Days Battles; then, on
May 23,
1862, to
major general. He joined
James Longstreet's
corps in the
Army of Northern Virginia as 1st Division commander and stayed with Longstreet for most of the war.
During
Robert E. Lee's
invasion of
Maryland in 1862, McLaws's division was split from the rest of the corps, operated in conjunction with Maj. Gen.
Thomas J. "Stonewall" Jackson, and captured Maryland Heights at
Harpers Ferry. He marched his division to
Sharpsburg, Maryland, and defended the West Woods in the
Battle of Antietam. Lee was disappointed in McLaws's slow arrival on the battlefield. At the
Battle of Fredericksburg, McLaws was one of the divisions defending Marye's Heights and he satisfied Lee with his ferocious defensive performance.
At
Chancellorsville, while the rest of Longstreet's corps was detached for duty near
Suffolk, Virginia, McLaws fought directly under Lee's command. On
May 3,
1863, Lee sent McLaws's division to stop the Union
VI Corps under Maj. Gen.
John Sedgwick marching toward Lee's rear. He did accomplish this, but Lee was disappointed that McLaws had not attacked more aggressively and caused more harm to Sedgwick's corps, instead of letting him escape across the
Rappahannock River. When Lee reorganized his army to compensate for Jackson's mortal wounding at Chancellorsville, Longstreet recommended his subordinate for one of the two new corps commands, but both men were disappointed when Lee chose
Richard S. Ewell and
A.P. Hill instead. McLaws requested a transfer, but it was denied.
During the
Battle of Gettysburg on
July 2,
1863, McLaws commanded the second division to step off in Longstreet's massive assault on the Union left flank. He achieved great success (at great cost in lives) in the areas known as the
Wheatfield and the
Peach Orchard, but the army as a whole was unable to dislodge the Union forces from their positions on
Cemetery Ridge. His division did not participate in
Pickett's Charge the next day, despite Longstreet's command of that assault.
McLaws accompanied Longstreet's corps to
Tennessee to come to the aid of Gen.
Braxton Bragg's army. His division arrived too late to help at
Chickamauga and
Chattanooga. In the
Knoxville Campaign, Longstreet relieved McLaws for the failure of the attack on
Fort Sanders, citing inadequate preparations. A court of inquiry cleared McLaws of most charges, but it took the intercession of
Jefferson Davis to restore his command. Understandably, his relationship with Longstreet was ruined. He left the corps and, since Lee would not accept him for command in Virginia, he was sent to Georgia to defend (unsuccessfully)
Savannah against Maj. Gen.
William T. Sherman's
March to the Sea. McLaws surrendered with Gen.
Joseph E. Johnston's army in
North Carolina on
April 26,
1865.
Postbellum
After the war, McLaws worked in the insurance business, served as Savannah's postmaster, and was active in Confederate veterans' organizations. Despite his wartime differences with Longstreet, McLaws initially defended Longstreet in the post-war attempts by
Jubal Early and others to smear his reputation. Just before his death, however, his opinion changed about the
lost cause movement, and he began speaking out about Longstreet's failures at Gettysburg.
Lafayette McLaws died in Savannah and is buried there in
Laurel Grove Cemetery. He is the posthumous author of ''A Soldier's General: The Civil War Letters of Major General Lafayette McLaws'' (2002).
References
★ Eicher, John H., and Eicher, David J., ''Civil War High Commands'', Stanford University Press, 2001, ISBN 0-8047-3641-3.
★ Tagg, Larry,
''The Generals of Gettysburg'', Savas Publishing, 1998, ISBN 1-882810-30-9.