'Richard Taylor' (
January 27,
1826 –
April 12,
1879) was a
Confederate general in the
American Civil War. He was the son of United States
President Zachary Taylor and
First Lady Margaret Taylor.
Early life
Richard Taylor was born at the "Springfields" family estate near
Louisville, Kentucky. The estate was named for Taylor's grandfather, a Virginian who had served in the
American Revolution. Much of his early life was spent on the American frontier with his father Zachary, a
U.S. Army officer. As a young man, he attended private schools in
Kentucky and
Massachusetts. Although starting his college studies at
Harvard University, he graduated from
Yale in 1845. He received no scholastic honors, but spent the majority of his time reading books on classical and military history. During the
Mexican-American War, Taylor served as the military secretary to his father.
His father sent Taylor away during the war because of his
rheumatoid arthritis. He agreed to manage the family cotton plantation in
Jefferson County, Mississippi, and, in 1850, he persuaded his father (now President Taylor by virtue of his election in 1848) to purchase Fashion, a large sugar plantation in
St. Charles Parish, Louisiana.
On
February 10,
1851, Richard Taylor married Louise Marie Myrthe Bringier, daughter of a wealthy French creole matriarch Aglae Bringier, who would soon help them out financially after the freeze of 1856. Taylor and Marie Bringier would go on to have five children, two sons and three daughters; Richard, Zachary, Louise, Elizbeth, and Myrthe. His two sons, Richard and Zachary, both died during the war after contracting
scarlet fever, the loss of which hurt the elder Richard Taylor deeply.
After Zachary Taylor's untimely death in July 1850, Taylor inherited Fashion. Steadily he increased its area, improved its sugar works (at considerable expense), and expanded its labor force to nearly 200 slaves, making him one of the richest men in Louisiana. But the freeze of 1856 ruined his crop, forcing him into heavy debt with a large mortgage on Fashion.
Politics
In 1855, entered local politics when he was elected to the
Louisiana Senate, in which he served until 1861. He was first affiliated with the
Whig Party, then the American (
Know Nothing) Party, and then finally the
Democratic Party. He was sent to the Democratic Convention in
Charleston as a delegate from Louisiana and witnessed the splintering of the Democrats. While in Charleston, he tried to make a compromise between the two Democratic fractions, but his attempts ultimately failed.
Civil War
When the Civil War erupted, Taylor was asked by Confederate General
Braxton Bragg to assist him, as a civilian, at
Pensacola, Florida. Bragg knew Taylor from before the war, when the two had become friends. Bragg also was aware of Taylors knowledge of military history and was eager to give him a job to help him organize and train the Confederate forces that were being sent there. Even though Taylor had been opposed to secession, he accepted.
Jefferson Davis would later comment that the soldiers being sent from Pensacola were some of the best trained soldiers in the Confederacy. It was while he was serving there that Taylor was appointed
Colonel of the 9th Louisiana Infantry, and served at the
First Battle of Bull Run. The members of the 9th Louisiana voted for Taylor because they thought that with his connections with his brother-in-law Jefferson Davis, that the unit would be sent out sooner and see battle more quickly.
On
October 21,
1861, Taylor was promoted to
brigadier general and commanded a Louisiana brigade under
Richard S. Ewell in the
Shenandoah Valley campaign and during the
Seven Days. Taylor was promoted over three more senior regimental commanders, and those commanders immediately thought that favoritism was involved because of Taylor's relationship with Jefferson Davis. Instead, Davis cited Taylor's leadership capabilities and the promise he showed and that he was recommended for the promotion by
General Jackson himself. During the Valley Campaign, Jackson used Taylor's brigade as an elite strike force that set a crippling marching pace and dealt swift flanking attacks. At the
Battle of Front Royal on
May 23, again at the
First Battle of Winchester on
May 25, and finally at the climactic
Battle of Port Republic on
June 9, he led the Louisianans in timely assaults against strong enemy positions.
His brigade consisted of various Louisiana regiments as well as Major
Chatham Roberdeau Wheats "Louisiana Tiger" battalion. The assortment was an undisciplined lot that was known for its hard-fighting on the battlefield, but also for its hard-living outside of the battlefield. Taylor instilled discipline into the Tigers and although Major Wheat did not agree with how he did, he nonetheless respected Taylor.
Taylor was promoted to the rank of
major general on
July 28,
1862, the youngest major general in the Confederacy at the time, and after a brief assignment as a recruiting officer in Louisiana, he was given command of the tiny District of West Louisiana. He was sent to Louisiana after Governor
Thomas O. Moore had insistently requested a capable and dedicated officer to assemble the state's defenses and to help counter Federal forays into the state. Another reason for sending Taylor to Louisiana was Taylor's attacks of
rheumatoid arthritis, which left him crippled for days at a time. During the Seven Days, Taylor was so incapacitated that he was unable to leave his camp and command his brigade.
Before Taylor returned to Louisiana, Federal forces in the area had their way with much of southern
Louisiana. During the spring of 1862, Union forces came upon Taylor's plantation, Fashion, and plundered it. A
Vermont soldier wrote down all that transpired:
[1]
Taylor enjoyed the appointment, and the fact that he was to return to Louisiana, but found the district almost completely devoid of troops and supplies. However, he did the best with these limited resources by securing two capable subordinates, veteran infantry commander (Jean Jacques Alexandre)
Alfred Mouton, and veteran cavalry commander
Thomas Green. These two commanders would prove crucial to Taylor's upcoming campaigns in the state.
During 1863, Taylor directed an effective series of clashes with
Union forces over control of lower Louisiana, most notably at
Battle of Fort Bisland and the
Battle of Irish Bend. These clashes were fought against
Union Major General Nathaniel P. Banks for control of the
Bayou Teche region in southern
Louisiana and his ultimate objective of
Siege of Port Hudson. After Banks had successfully pushed Taylor's
Army of Western Louisiana aside, he continued on his way to Port Hudson via
Alexandria, Louisiana. After these battles, Taylor formulated a plan for recaptured
Bayou Teche, along with the city of
New Orleans, Louisiana, and also halt the
Siege of Port Hudson.
Operations to recapture New Orleans
Taylor's plan was to move down the
Bayou Teche, capturing the lightly defended outposts and supply depots, and then capturing New Orleans, which would cut off
Nathaniel P. Banks's army from their supplies. Although his plan met with approval from
Secretary of War James A. Seddon and
President Jefferson Davis, Taylor's immediate superior,
Edmund Kirby Smith, felt that operations on the Louisiana banks of the Mississippi across from Vicksburg would be the best strategy to halt the
Siege of Vicksburg. From
Alexandria, Louisiana, Taylor marched his army up to Richmond, Louisiana. There he was joined with Confederate Maj. Gen.
John G. Walker's Texas Division, who called themselves "
Walker's Greyhounds". Taylor ordered Walker's division to attack Federal troops at two locations on the Louisiana side of the Mississippi. The ensuing
Battle of Milliken's Bend and
Battle of Youngs Point failed to accomplish the Confederate objectives. After initial success at Milliken's Bend, that engagement ended in failure after Federal gunboats began shelling the Confederate positions. Youngs Point ended prematurely as well.
After the battles, Taylor marched his army, minus Walker's division, down to the Bayou Teche region. From there Taylor captured Brashear City (
Morgan City, Louisiana), which yielded tremendous amounts of supplies, materiel, and new weapons for his army. He then moved within the outskirts of New Orleans, which was only being held by a few green recruits under Brig. Gen.
William H. Emory. While Taylor was encamped on the outskirts and preparing for his attack against the city it was then that he received word that
Port Hudson had fallen. He then withdrew his forces all the way back up Bayou Teche to avoid the risk of being captured.
Red River Campaign
In 1864, Taylor humiliated Union General
Nathaniel P. Banks by defeating him in the
Red River Campaign with a smaller force, commanding the Confederate forces in the
Battle of Mansfield and the
Battle of Pleasant Hill. He then pursued Banks back to the Mississippi River and for his efforts received the Thanks of the Confederate Congress. It was at these two battles that the two commanders Taylor had come to trust, respect, and rely on during his tenure in Louisiana,
Brigadier Generals
Alfred Mouton and
Thomas Green were killed while leading their men into combat. On
April 8,
1864, Taylor was promoted to
lieutenant general, despite having asked to be relieved because of his distrust of his superior in the campaign,
Edmund Kirby Smith.
Last days of the War
Taylor was given command of the Department of Alabama and Mississippi and commanded the defenses of the city of
Mobile, Alabama. After
John Bell Hood's disastrous
campaign into
Tennessee, Taylor was given command of the
Army of Tennessee. He surrendered his department, the last Confederate force remaining east of the
Mississippi, to Union General
Edward Canby on
May 8,
1865, and was paroled five days later.
Postbellum life
After the war, Richard Taylor wrote his memoirs, ''Destruction and Reconstruction'', which is one of the most credited reports of the Civil War. He was active in Democratic Party politics, interceded on behalf of Jefferson Davis with President
Andrew Johnson, and was a leading political opponent of Northern
Reconstruction policies. He died in
New York City and is buried in Metairie Cemetery,
New Orleans.
Most of Taylor's contemporaries, subordinates, and fellow generals make mention many times of his military prowess.
Nathan Bedford Forrest commented that "He's the biggest man in the lot. If we'd had more like him, we would have licked the Yankees long ago." "Dick Taylor was a born soldier," asserted a close friend. "Probably no civilian of his time was more deeply versed in the annals of war."
Stonewall Jackson and
Richard S. Ewell frequently commented on their conversations with Taylor. Ewell stated that he came away from his conversations with Taylor more knowledgeable and impressed with the amount of information Taylor possessed.
Family
Richard Taylor was the only son of
Margaret Mackall Smith and future President
Zachary Taylor. His sister
Sarah Knox Taylor was the first wife of
Jefferson Davis, making Richard Taylor the brother-in-law of the Confederacy's President. His other sister,
Mary Elizabeth Bliss, who had married
William Wallace Smith Bliss in 1848, served as her father's White House hostess.
Although Richard chose to serve the Confederacy, his uncle,
Joseph Pannill Taylor, served on the opposite side as a brigadier general in the
Union Army.
Taylor and his wife Myrthe, whom he had married in 1851, had two sons and three daughters. His wife, born in
St. James Parish, Louisiana, died in 1875.
References
★ Eicher, John H., and Eicher, David J., ''Civil War High Commands'', Stanford University Press, 2001, ISBN 0-8047-3641-3.
★ Parrish, T. Michael, ''Richard Taylor, Soldier Prince of Dixie'', University of North Carolina Press, 1992.
★ Prushankin, Jeffery S., ''A Crisis in Confederate Command: Edmund Kirby Smith, Richard Taylor and the Army of the Trans-Mississippi'', Louisiana State University Press, 2005, ISBN 0-8071-3088-5.
★ Taylor, Richard,
''Destruction and Reconstruction: Personal Experiences of the Late War'', J.S. Sanders & Co., 2001, ISBN 1-879941-21-X.
★ Warner, Ezra J., ''Generals in Gray: Lives of the Confederate Commanders'', Louisiana State University Press, 1959, ISBN 0-8071-0823-5.
Notes
1. Parrish, pp. 354-55.
External links
★
New Texas Handbook biography