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Samuel Read Anderson

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Name
  
Samuel Anderson


Other work
  
Tennessee

Samuel Read Anderson Samuel Read Anderson Wikipedia

Born
  
February 17, 1804 Bedford County, Virginia (
1804-02-17
)

Place of burial
  
Nashville City Cemetery, Nashville, Tennessee

Allegiance
  
United States of America Confederate States of America

Service/branch
  
United States Army  Confederate States Army

Years of service
  
1846–1847 (USA) 1861–1862, 1864–1865 (CSA)

Rank
  
Lieutenant Colonel (USV) Brigadier General (CSA)

Commands held
  
Anderson's Brigade, Military District of Northern Virginia

Died
  
January 2, 1883, Nashville, Tennessee, United States

Battles and wars
  
Mexican–American War, Battle of Cheat Mountain, American Civil War

Similar People
  
Robert E Lee, John B Floyd, Erastus B Tyler, Nathan Kimball, Joseph J Reynolds

Samuel Read Anderson (February 17, 1804 – January 2, 1883) was an American businessman and military officer in two wars. He was the Postmaster of Nashville, Tennessee, from 1853 until 1861 and then was a Confederate Brigadier General during the American Civil War. He commanded a mixed brigade of infantry and cavalry in the Eastern Theater in Virginia until the spring of 1862 when he was forced to resign because of ill health. Anderson later supervised the Confederate military draft in Tennessee until the end of the war.

Contents

Samuel Read Anderson Major General Samuel Read Anderson Civil War Veteran Sumner Co TN

Early life and career

Samuel R. Anderson was born in Bedford County, Virginia to Robert Anderson, formerly an officer in the American Revolution. His family moved westward, first to the Kentucky frontier and then to Tennessee where he was educated and raised. By the mid-1840s he had married and become a successful businessman and one of the leading citizens of Davidson County, Tennessee.

During the Mexican War, he helped recruit volunteers from the state to serve in the Federal army. He received a commission as the Lieutenant Colonel of the 1st Tennessee Volunteer Infantry Regiment and served with that unit in Mexico.

After the war, he returned to Tennessee and worked for the Bank of Tennessee. In 1853 received a political patronage position as the postmaster of Nashville. He served in that role until the outbreak of the Civil War, when he resigned in May 1861 to join the state's pro-Confederate forces.

Civil War service

On May 9, 1861, Anderson, because of his previous military experience and political connections, received a commission from Tennessee's governor Isham G. Harris as a major general in the state's provisional forces. Within a few weeks, those units were formally transferred to the Provisional Army of the Confederate States (PACS) and Anderson became a Confederate brigadier general on July 9.

He commanded a brigade of the 1st, 7th, and 14th Tennessee infantry and one company of Tennessee cavalry. His troops were transported to western Virginia where he played a role in the Cheat Mountain campaign while serving under Robert E. Lee. He then was assigned to the command of William W. Loring and spent the winter of 1861-62 serving in the mountains of western Virginia before being transferred with his brigade to help in the defenses of Yorktown, Virginia. However, his health has been impaired by the harsh service and he resigned on May 10, 1862 and returned home.

On November 7, 1864, Anderson returned to the rank of brigadier general when at the age of sixty he accepted an appointment from the Confederate President Jefferson Davis, and supervised the Confederate Bureau of Conscription for Tennessee. However, with much of Tennessee in Federal hands, Anderson was forced to establish his headquarters in Selma, Alabama, for the rest of the war.

Later life and career

After the Civil War ended in 1865, Anderson was paroled and he returned to Tennessee. He became a prominent businessman in Nashville and was active in veterans affairs.

Samuel R. Anderson died in Nashville on January 2, 1883 and is buried in the Nashville City Cemetery.

References

Samuel Read Anderson Wikipedia