Samuel
Curtis was born in New York in 1805. He attended the U.S. Military Academy
at West Point, NY, graduating in 1831, but left the Army soon after. He
moved to Ohio, where he worked as a lawyer, a civil engineer, and a railroad
promoter. Publicly, he was methodical, precise and formal; in private,
however, he enjoyed long walks, collecting wildflowers and writing to
his family.
During the Mexican War, he served
as a military governor of several occupied cities. After the war, Curtis
moved to Iowa and, in 1856, was elected to Congress as a Republican. He
was a strong supporter of Abraham Lincoln and was considered for a cabinet
position in the new administration. When war broke out, he raised the
2nd Iowa Infantry and was assigned to organizing the chaotic affairs in
Saint Louis. General Halleck gave Curtis command of the Army of the Southwest
on Christmas Day, 1861.
After Pea Ridge, Curtis continued
the campaign, eventually capturing Helena, Arkansas on July 12th, 1862.
He was promoted to Major General for his successes at Pea Ridge. In September,
1862, Curtis was given command of the Department of Missouri, although
President Lincoln was soon forced to reassign him because of a bitter
dispute between Curtis and Missouri's governor over Curtis's abolitionist
views. He took to the field once again in 1864 against Sterling Price's
invasion of Missouri. He ended Price's plans at the Battle of Westport
(near present day Kansas City, Missouri). Curtis ended the war as commander
of the Department of the Northwest, dealing with issues on the frontier.
After the war, he returned to
Keokuk, Iowa where he promoted the transcontinental railroad. He died
on December 26, 1866, after an inspection of the Union Pacific Railroad
line. Although largely forgotten by history, Curtis was the Federal Army's
most successful general throughout the first two years of the war.
In
2001, the Pea Ridge National Military Park obtained two of General Curtis's
uniform coats from the Museum of Connecticut History. One of the coats
was worn by General Curtis at Pea Ridge.
(click on the picture to see
a larger image and description of the coats. This will open in a new browser
window.)
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