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General W. H. L. Wallace Isabel Wallace New
Foreword by John Y. Simon September 2000 ISBN 0-8093-2347-8 | cloth | $30.00t ISBN 0-8093-2348-6 | paper | $19.95t 262 pages | 15 illustrations | 5 1/2 x 7 3/4
A Shawnee Classic Originally
published in 1909, this biography by Isabel Wallace recounts the life of
her adoptive father, the little-recognized William Hervy Lamme Wallace,
the highest-ranking Union officer to fall at the battle of Shiloh. Born
in 1821 in Ohio, Wallace and his family moved to Illinois in 1834, where
he was educated at Rock Springs Seminary in Mount Morris. On his way to
study law with Abraham Lincoln in Springfield in 1844, Wallace was
persuaded by local attorney T. Lyle Dickey, a close friend of Lincoln, to
join his practice in Ottawa instead. Wallace eventually married Dickey’s
daughter, Martha Ann, in 1851. When
the Civil War broke out, both Wallace and Dickey immediately volunteered
for service with the Eleventh Illinois, which assembled in Springfield.
Wallace was elected as the unit’s colonel; a successful lawyer, a friend
of President Lincoln, a generation older than most privates, and an
officer with Mexican War experience, he was entirely suited for such
command. Wallace
was appointed brigadier general for his performance at Fort Donelson, the
first notable Union victory in the Civil War. Wallace’s troops had saved
the day, although the Eleventh Illinois had lost nearly two-thirds of its
men. He then moved with his troops to Pittsburg Landing, Tennessee, where
Confederates launched a surprise attack on the forces of Major General
Ulysses S. Grant at Shiloh Church on Sunday, April 6, 1862. Wallace, who
held only temporary command of one of Grant’s six divisions, fought
bravely but was mortally wounded as he began to withdraw his men on the
afternoon of the battle. His wife, who had arrived at Pittsburg Landing by
steamer on the day of the battle, was at his side when he died three days
later. Grant praised Wallace in 1868 as “the equal of the best, if not
the very best, of the Volunteer Generals with me at the date of his
death.” Isabel
Wallace traces her father’s life from his upbringing in Ottawa through
his education, his service in the Mexican War, his law practice, his
courtship of and marriage to her mother, and his service in the Eleventh
Illinois until his mortal injury at Shiloh. She also details his funeral
and her and her mother’s life in the postwar years. Based on the copious
letters and family papers of the general and his wife, the biography also
provides historical information on federal politics of the period,
including commentary on Lincoln’s campaign and election and on state
politics, especially regarding T. Lyle Dickey, Wallace’s father-in-law
and law partner, prominent Illinois politician, and associate of Lincoln.
It is illustrated with fifteen black-and-white halftones. Isabel
Wallace was only four years old when her father fell at Shiloh. She
lived at The Oaks, the family home in Ottawa, Illinois, until her death in
1933. John Y.
Simon
is a professor of history at Southern Illinois University
Carbondale. He is the editor of The
Papers of Ulysses S. Grant, published by Southern Illinois
University Press.
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