| General Notes:
One of
the most immodest and immoral of the high Union commanders,
"Fighting Joe" Hooker frequently felt slighted by his superiors and
requested to be relieved of duty. The Massachusetts native and West
Pointer (1837) had been posted to the artillery but was serving as a
staff officer when he won three brevets in Mexico. Unfortunately for
his later career he testified against Winfield Scott before a court
of inquiry on the Mexican War. After a two-year leave he resigned on
February 21, 1853, to settle in California where he was in the
farming and land businesses.
At the outset of the Civil War he became a colonel of the state
militia but soon offered his services to Washington where his
anti-Scott testimony came back to haunt him. As a civilian he
witnessed the disaster at lst Bull Run and wrote to Lincoln
complaining of the mismanagement and advancing his own claim to a
commission. Accepted, his assignments included: brigadier general,
USV (August 3, 1861, to rank from May 17); commanding brigade,
Division of the Potomac (August - October 3, 1861); commanding
division, Army of the Potomac (October 3, 1861 -March 13, 1862);
commanding 2nd Division, 3rd Corps, Army of the Potomac (March 13 -
September 5, 1862); major general, USV (May 5, 1862); commanding 3rd
Corps, Army of Virginia (September 6-12, 1862); commanding lst
Corps, Army of the Potomac (September 12-17, 1862); brigadier
general, USA (September 20, 1862); commanding 5th Corps, Army of the
Potomac (November 10-16, 1862); commanding Center Grand Division,
Army of the Potomac (November 16, 1862-January 26, 1863); commanding
Department and Army of the Potomac (January 26 - June 28, 1863);
commanding llth and 12th Corps, Army of the Cumberland (September 25
- April 14, 1863); commanding 20th Corps, Army of the Cumberland
(April 14 - July 28, 1864); and commanding Northern Department
(October 1, 1864 - June 27, 1865).
After leading a brigade and then a division around Washington he
went with McClellan's army to the Peninsula, earning a reputation
for looking after his men during the siege operations at Yorktown.
His other reputation as a heavy user of alcohol was not so enviable.
He was particularly distinguished at Williamsburg and although he
felt slighted by his commander's report he was named a major general
of volunteers from the date of the action. Further fighting for
Hooker came at Seven Pines and throughout the Seven Days. Following
its close he scored a minor success in the retaking of Malvern Hill
from the Confederates. Transferred to Pope with his division, he
took part in the defeat at 2nd Bull Run.
Given command of a corps for the Maryland Campaign, he fought at
South Mountain and was wounded in the foot early in the morning
fighting at Antietam. Three days later he was named a regular army
brigadier general. Returning to duty, he briefly commanded the 5th
Corps before being given charge of the Center Grand Division when
Burnside reorganized his army into these two-corps formations. After
the defeat at Fredericksburg and the disastrous Mud March, Burnside
was relieved. In a letter to the Army of the Potomac's new
commander, Hooker, Lincoln praised the general's fighting abilities
but strongly questioned Hooker's previous criticism of commanders
and feared that this might come back to haunt the new chief. Lincoln
was also critical of the general's loose talk on the need for a
military dictatorship to win the war.
Once in charge, Hooker's headquarters were roundly criticized by
many as a combination of bar and brothel. When he launched his
campaign against Lee, Hooker swore off liquor. This may have hurt
more than it helped. After a brilliantly executed maneuver around
Lee's flank and the crossing of two rivers, Hooker lost his nerve
and withdrew his forces back into the Wilderness to await
reinforcements from John Sedgewick's command coming from
Fredericksburg. Here he felt convinced that Lee was in retreat but
was surprised by Jackson's flank attack, which routed Oliver 0.
Howard's 11th Corps. To make matters worse Hooker was dazed by the
effects of a shell striking a pillar on the porch of his
headquarters. He lost control of the army and ordered a withdrawal.
Kept in command, he led the army northward in the early part of the
Gettysburg Campaign until he resigned on June 28, 1863, over control
of the garrison at Harpers Ferry. On January 28, 1864, he received
the Thanks of Congress for the beginnings of the campaign. With the
Union defeat at Chickamauga, he was given charge of the Armv of the
Potomac's 1lth and 12th Corps and sent to the relief of the Army of
the Cumberland at Chattanooga. In the battles around that place in
November 1863 he did well in keeping open the supply lines and in
the taking of Lookout Mountain. However, in Grant's report his
actions were overshadowed by the less distinguished role of Sherman.
The next spring the two corps were merged into the new 20th Corps
with Hooker at their head. He fought through the Atlanta Campaign
but when McPherson was killed before the city and Howard received
command of the Army of the Tennessee, he asked to be relieved. This
was granted and he finished the war in the quiet sector of Michigan,
Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois.
Brevetted major general in the regular army for Chattanooga, he was
mustered out of the volunteers on September 1, 1866, and two years
later was retired with the increased rank of major general. Always
popular with his men, he lacked the confidence of his subordinate
officers and was quarrelsome with his superiors. His nickname, which
he never liked, resulted from the deletion of a dash in a
journalistic dispatch that was discussing the Peninsula Campaign and
"Fighting" was thereafter linked to his name. Popular legend has it
that his name was permanently attached to prostitutes from his Civil
War actions in rounding them up in one area of Washington. He died
in Garden City, New York, on October 31, 1879, and is buried in
Cincinnati. (Herbert, Walter H., Fighting Joe Hooker)
Source: "Who Was Who In The Civil War" by Stewart Sifakis |