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Encyclopedia > Samuel Curtis

Samuel R. Curtis (1805 - December 26, 1866) was an American military officer, most famous for his role in the American Civil War.

Samuel Curtis Major General Samuel R. Curtis

Born in New York, Curtis graduated from West Point in 1831. He moved to Ohio, where he took several civilian jobs. During the Mexican War, he served as military governor of several occupied cities. After the war, he moved to Iowa, and was elected to Congress in 1856 as a Republican. He was a supporter of eventual President Abraham Lincoln, and was considered for a cabinet position; however, when the Civil War broke out, Curtis took command of the 2nd Iowa Regiment.


After organizing the chaos in St. Louis, Missouri, Curtis was given command of the Army of the Southwest in 1861 by Major General Henry W. Halleck. Curtis moved to solidify the Union control in Arkansas. His units fought at the Battle of Pea Ridge in 1862, and in July, they captured the city of Helena, Arkansas. He was promoted to Major General for his success. Although in September Curtis was given command of the Department of Missouri, Lincoln was soon forced to reassign him, after his abolitionist views led to conflict with the governor of Missouri.


In 1864, he returned to Missouri, fighting against the Confederate invasion led by General Sterling Price. When that invasion was halted at the Battle of Westport, Curtis was given a position until the end of the war in the frontier, commanding the Department of the Northwest. After the war, he returned to Keokuk, Iowa, where he was involved with the Union advances in railroads, until his death in 1866. Although most historical works do not focus on him, Samuel Curtis was probably the most successful Union general in the beginning of the Civil War.


External link

  • National Park Service Biography (http://www.nps.gov/peri/curtis.htm)

  Results from FactBites:
 
Samuel Curtis - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (396 words)
Samuel Ryan Curtis (February 3, 1805 – December 26, 1866) was an American military officer, most famous for his role in the Trans-Mississippi Theater of the American Civil War.
Louis, Missouri, Curtis was given command of the Army of the Southwest on December 25, 1861, by Major General Henry W. Halleck.
When that invasion was halted at the Battle of Westport, Curtis was given a position until the end of the war on the frontier, commanding the Department of the Northwest.
Samuel Curtis La Chaire Garden Project - Samuel Curtis (1004 words)
Samuel Curtis was born in Walworth, Surrey on August 29th 1779.
Samuel re-named it, 'The New Series' of The Curtis Botanical Magazine and enlisted the editorial help of William J. Hooker who was Professor of Botany at Glasgow University at the time.
Curtis continued to live at Glazenwood until 1845, when he moved to London to take on a commission, (obtained through his close friend and colleague William Hooker, who was by this time Director of the Royal Botanic Gardens Kew), to design and create London's largest open space, The Victoria Park, Bethnal Green.
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