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William Sooy Smith

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Rank
  
Major General

Role
  
Civil engineer

Name
  
William Smith

Commands held
  
13th Ohio Infantry



Born
  
July 22, 1830 Tarlton, Ohio (
1830-07-22
)

Place of burial
  
Forest Home Cemetery, Forest Park, Illinois

Years of service
  
1853 – 1854; 1861 – 1864

Battles/wars
  
American Civil War Battle of Shiloh Battle of Perryville Battle of Okolona

Died
  
March 4, 1916, Medford, Oregon, United States

Education
  
Ohio University, United States Military Academy

Battles and wars
  
Battle of Shiloh, Battle of Perryville, Battle of Okolona, American Civil War

Service/branch
  
United States Army, Union Army

Allegiance
  
United States of America, Union

Projects
  
Chicago Federal Building

William sooy smith


William Sooy Smith (July 22, 1830 – March 4, 1916) was a West Point graduate and career civil engineer who became a major general in the Union Army during the American Civil War.

Contents

In civilian life, he was a renowned engineer involved in bridge construction that included the building of the first large all steel bridge in the world.

Early life and career

Smith was born in Tarlton, Ohio, and graduated from Ohio University in 1849 with an engineering degree. He furthered this degree at West Point as soon as he left the university, graduating sixth in his class from the U.S. Military Academy in 1853. Smith resigned from the Army on June 19, 1854 to accept a position with the Illinois Central Railroad.

Smith established the engineering company Parkinson & Smith in 1857, and was involved in the first surveys for a bridge between the United States and Canada across the Niagara River near Niagara Falls.

Civil War

In 1861 at the outbreak of the Civil War, Smith joined the 13th Ohio Infantry, and by June he was commissioned as its colonel. After serving in western Virginia, he was promoted to brigadier general (volunteers) in April 1862 during the Battle of Shiloh. Smith participated in the Vicksburg campaign, commanding the XVI Corps' first division.

On January 27, 1864, during Union attacks on Meridian, Mississippi, Smith was given the command of General Hurlbut's force of 7,000 cavalry along with the 2,500 that was already under his command. Confederate forces under Maj. Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest, however, defeated these forces on February 22, 1864 in the Battle of Okolona. Smith, having disobeyed orders from Sherman, was forced to fight this eleven-mile running battle before retreating across the state line into Tennessee on February 26, where he was criticized for putting Sherman's Meridian Expedition in danger.

Afterwards, he served as chief of cavalry in both the Department of Tennessee and the Military Division of the Mississippi, under Ulysses S. Grant and William T. Sherman. He resigned from the Army in July 1864 due to rheumatoid arthritis.

Postbellum career

After leaving the army Smith returned to civil engineering. In 1867, he sank the first pneumatic caisson of the Waugoshanee lighthouse in the Straits of Mackinaw. At Glasgow, Missouri, from 1878 to 1879, Smith worked on the Glasgow Railroad Bridge. This was the first all-steel bridge, which crossed the Missouri River.

In 1876 Smith was awarded the American Centennial Exposition prize, and continued to work in engineering until retirement to Medford, Oregon towards the end of his life. After his death in 1916, he was buried in Forest Home Cemetery in Forest Park, Illinois.

References

William Sooy Smith Wikipedia