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Hugh Judson Kilpatrick

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Hugh Judson Kilpatrick Famous memorial Veteran

Original Name
Hugh
Birth
Wantage, Sussex County, New Jersey, USA
Death
4 Dec 1881 (aged 45)
Santiago, Provincia de Santiago, Santiago Metropolitan, Chile
Burial
West Point, Orange County, New York, USA GPS-Latitude: 41.39978, Longitude: -73.9663617
Plot
Section 26, Row B, Grave 17
Memorial ID
View Source
Civil War Union Major General. Known as "Kil-cavalry" during the war because he pushed his men and horses to the brink of fatigue. He was in constant combat during the Civil War, and emerged as one of the more controversial Union military figures. He was wounded in a skirmish at Big Bethel, Virginia in June 1861 (making him the first Regular Army officer to be wounded during the Civil War). He commanded the 2nd New York Volunteer Cavalry in operations in Virginia until his promotion to Brigadier General. He directed troops in the fighting at Beverly Ford, General George Stoneman's botched Chancellorsville raid, and at Gettysburg. His unsuccessful February-March 1864 raid in Richmond resulted in the death of Colonel Ulric Dahlgren, and the discovery of controversial papers on Dalhgren's body. Sent Southward, he fought with General William Sherman and assisted him in his "March to the Sea". A brave combat leader, he nevertheless acquire a reputation for self-indulgence and self-promotion in his dispatched and press reports, as well as a reputation for having very loose morals in a highly religious era.
Civil War Union Major General. Known as "Kil-cavalry" during the war because he pushed his men and horses to the brink of fatigue. He was in constant combat during the Civil War, and emerged as one of the more controversial Union military figures. He was wounded in a skirmish at Big Bethel, Virginia in June 1861 (making him the first Regular Army officer to be wounded during the Civil War). He commanded the 2nd New York Volunteer Cavalry in operations in Virginia until his promotion to Brigadier General. He directed troops in the fighting at Beverly Ford, General George Stoneman's botched Chancellorsville raid, and at Gettysburg. His unsuccessful February-March 1864 raid in Richmond resulted in the death of Colonel Ulric Dahlgren, and the discovery of controversial papers on Dalhgren's body. Sent Southward, he fought with General William Sherman and assisted him in his "March to the Sea". A brave combat leader, he nevertheless acquire a reputation for self-indulgence and self-promotion in his dispatched and press reports, as well as a reputation for having very loose morals in a highly religious era.

Bio by: RPD2



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  • Maintained by: Find a Grave
  • Added: Oct 11, 2000
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/12931/hugh_judson-kilpatrick: accessed ), memorial page for Hugh Judson Kilpatrick (14 Jan 1836–4 Dec 1881), Find a Grave Memorial ID 12931, citing United States Military Academy Post Cemetery, West Point, Orange County, New York, USA; Maintained by Find a Grave.