previous next

Wallace, Lewis 1827-

Military officer and author; born in Brookville, Ind., April 10, [116] 1827; son of Gov. David Wallace; studied law, and began practice in Crawfordsville, Ind. He served as lieutenant of Indiana volunteers in the war with Mexico, and afterwards resumed his profession. He served one term in the State Senate; and when the Civil War broke out he was appointed adjutant-general of Indiana. Soon afterwards he was made colonel of the 11th (Zouave) Indiana Volunteers, with which he performed signal

Lewis Wallace.

service in western Virginia (see Romney, skirmish at). When he fell back to Cumberland, after his dash on Romney, the Confederates took heart and advanced, 4,000 strong—infantry, cavalry, and artillery—under Colonel McDonald. They pushed on to New Creek and destroyed the bridge of the Baltimore and Ohio Railway there. They pressed on, destroyed all communication between Cumberland and Grafton, and completely isolated Wallace. He had neither cannon nor cavalry, and for twenty-one days his men had only twenty-one rounds of cartridges apiece. He prepared to retreat to Bedford, Pa., if attacked. He could not hold Cumberland, and sent his sick and baggage in that direction.

Then he boldly led his regiment out upon the same road, halted, changed front, and prepared for battle, believing that if the Confederates should enter Cumberland they would scatter in search of plunder; and in that case he would rush into the town and defeat them in detail. Informed of Wallace's bold stand, the Confederates halted within 5 miles of Cumberland, and at night hastened to Romney. Wallace retired to Cumberland and appealed to McClellan, Morris, and Patterson for reinforcements, but none could be spared, for there was danger and weakness at all points. The governor of Pennsylvania sent him ammunition and forwarded two regiments of the Pennsylvania Reserves to the borders of that State to assist the Indianians if they should be attacked. That gallant regiment successfully guarded the railway for about 100 miles, for the Confederates felt a wholesome fear of these Zouaves, who were often engaged in little skirmishes. Wallace had impressed thirteen horses into his service and mounted thirteen picked men of his regiment. While these were on a scout on June 26 they attacked forty-one mounted Confederates, killing eight of them, chasing the remainder 2 miles, and capturing seventeen of their horses. On their way back they were attacked by seventy-five mounted men. They had a terrible hand-to-hand fight that ceased only when night came on. The Zouaves had only one man killed, and the rest made their way back to camp in the darkness. For his eminent services in that region for three months Colonel Wallace was rewarded with the commission of brigadier-general. For his bravery and vigilance in guarding the Baltimore and Ohio Railway, the great line of communication with the West. Wallace was heartily commended by McClellan and others.

As brigadier-general of volunteers he led a division in the siege and capture of Fort Donelson. For his services on that occasion he was promoted to major-general. In the battle of Shiloh he was conspicuous for gallantry. In command at Baltimore, Md., in the summer of 1864, he gallantly held in check a large Confederate force, under General Early, endeavoring to strike Washington, until the arrival of troops that secured the latter place from capture (see Monocacy, battle of.) After the war he resumed his profession. In 1878 he was governor of New Mexico, and in 1881-85 was United [117] States minister to Turkey. He is the author of The fair God; Ben-Hur; The boyhood of Christ; The Prince of India; The Wooing of Malkatoon, etc.

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 United States License.

An XML version of this text is available for download, with the additional restriction that you offer Perseus any modifications you make. Perseus provides credit for all accepted changes, storing new additions in a versioning system.

hide People (automatically extracted)
Sort people alphabetically, as they appear on the page, by frequency
Click on a person to search for him/her in this document.
Lewis Wallace (8)
George B. McClellan (2)
David Wallace (1)
William Patterson (1)
Joseph Morris (1)
Archibald McDonald (1)
Jubal A. Early (1)
Jesus Christ (1)
hide Dates (automatically extracted)
Sort dates alphabetically, as they appear on the page, by frequency
Click on a date to search for it in this document.
1827 AD (2)
1885 AD (1)
1881 AD (1)
1878 AD (1)
1864 AD (1)
June 26th (1)
April 10th (1)
hide Display Preferences
Greek Display:
Arabic Display:
View by Default:
Browse Bar: