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John H Martindale

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Battles/wars
  
Parents
  
Henry C. Martindale

Role
  
American Politician

Name
  
John Martindale



Born
  
March 20, 1815Sandy Hill, New York (
1815-03-20
)

Place of burial
  
Batavia Cemetery, Batavia, New York

Service/branch
  
United States ArmyUnion Army

Years of service
  
1835 - 1836, 1861 - 1864

Rank
  
Brigadier General Brevet Major General

Died
  
December 13, 1881, Nice, France

Allegiance
  
United States of America, Union

Battles and wars
  
American Civil War

John Henry Martindale (March 20, 1815 – December 13, 1881) was an American lawyer, Union Army general, and politician.

Contents

Early life

Martindale was born in Sandy Hill, Washington County, New York, the son of Congressman Henry C. Martindale and Minerva Hitchcock Martindale. He entered the United States Military Academy at West Point in 1831, and graduated in 1835. He was appointed a brevet second lieutenant, but resigned from the Army the next year and began to study law. He was admitted to the bar in 1838, and commenced practice in Batavia, New York. In 1840, he married Emeline M. Holden. He was District Attorney of Genesee County from 1842 to 1846, and from 1848 to 1851. Then he removed to Rochester, New York.

Civil War

On August 9, 1861, Martindale was commissioned a brigadier general of volunteers in the Union Army, and will be assigned to command a brigade within the Union Army of the Potomac. He later participated in all the battles of the Peninsula Campaign in V Corps. After the retreat from Malvern Hill, he was brevetted a major general of volunteers, and appointed Military Governor of Washington, D.C., a post he held from November 1862 to May 1864. Afterward he returned to field service, fighting with the XVIII Corps in the Bermuda Hundred Campaign, the Battle of Cold Harbor and the Siege of Petersburg, commanding the corps briefly in mid-July 1864. In September 1864 he resigned his commission because of bad health.

Return To Post-War Life

John H. Martindale was New York State Attorney General from 1866 to 1867, elected in 1865 on the Republican ticket.

In 1877, one of his clients tried to shoot him at his law office in Rochester, New York.

He died in Nice, Alpes-Maritimes, France, and was buried at the Batavia Cemetery in Batavia, New York.

References

John H. Martindale Wikipedia


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