Granville Haller: Difference between revisions
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==Civil War and later career== | ==Civil War and later career== | ||
After the Civil War started, Haller commanded [[George McClellan]]’s headquarters guard during the Peninsula Campaign and again in the Maryland Campaign. In May of 1863, he returned to his native York to recover from illness contracted in the field. In June, Maj. Gen. [[Darius N. Couch]] appointed Haller to command the defenses of Adams County, Pennsylvania and York County, Pennsylvania counties in south-central Pennsylvania. During the Gettysburg Campaign, Haller retreated from Gettysburg to Wrightsville, Pennsylvania, where his militia burned the covered bridge to prevent passage over the Susquehanna River by a Confederate States Army brigade under [[John B. Gordon]]. | After the Civil War started, Haller commanded [[George B. McClellan]]’s headquarters guard during the Peninsula Campaign and again in the Maryland Campaign. In May of 1863, he returned to his native York to recover from illness contracted in the field. In June, Maj. Gen. [[Darius N. Couch]] appointed Haller to command the defenses of Adams County, Pennsylvania and York County, Pennsylvania counties in south-central Pennsylvania. During the Gettysburg Campaign, Haller retreated from Gettysburg to Wrightsville, Pennsylvania, where his militia burned the covered bridge to prevent passage over the Susquehanna River by a Confederate States Army brigade under [[John B. Gordon]]. | ||
Accused by naval officer Lt. [[Clark Henry Wells]] of disloyal conduct and sentiments after the Battle of Fredericksburg, Haller was dismissed from the service in July 1863. He eventually returned to the Northwest and became prominent in Seattle business and industry. Congressional friends convinced the Army in 1873 to convene a court of inquiry, which exonerated him. President of the President Rutherford B. Hayes helped him secure the regular army rank of colonel. Haller built a mansion in Seattle’s fashionable First Hill neighborhood. After his death at the age of 78, he was buried in Seattle's Lakeview Cemetery. | Accused by naval officer Lt. [[Clark Henry Wells]] of disloyal conduct and sentiments after the Battle of Fredericksburg, Haller was dismissed from the service in July 1863. He eventually returned to the Northwest and became prominent in Seattle business and industry. Congressional friends convinced the Army in 1873 to convene a court of inquiry, which exonerated him. President of the President Rutherford B. Hayes helped him secure the regular army rank of colonel. Haller built a mansion in Seattle’s fashionable First Hill neighborhood. After his death at the age of 78, he was buried in Seattle's Lakeview Cemetery. | ||
Revision as of 12:39, 15 October 2005
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Granville Owen Haller (1819-1897) - born 31 Jan 1819. Died 2 May 1897. He was a noted Indian fighter and military officer, as well as a wealthy antebellum businessman in the Seattle, Washington, area. During the U.S. Civil War, he was charged with the defense of south-central Pennsylvania during the early days of Gettysburg Campaign prior to the arrival of the Army of the Potomac.
Early life and career
Haller was born and raised in York, Pennsylvania. After Haller graduated in 1838 from the York County Academy, the board of trustees recommended him for an appointment to the United States Military Academy. Not receiving Senator James Buchanan’s appointment to West Point, Haller responded to a summons to go to Washington DC, where he was commissioned as a lieutenant in the 4th U.S. Infantry.
He fought Seminole Indians in Florida in 1840-1841 and later served with distinction at Battle of Monterrey, Veracruz, and other battles during the Mexican War, officering in the same regiment as Ulysses S. Grant. He distinguished himself in the Battle of Churubusco, where he took a key part in the assault on Molino del Rey. In 1852 Haller was promoted to major and transferred to the Washington Territory, where he joined the 7th U.S. Infantry and hunted down Indians who were part of localized insurrections.
Civil War and later career
After the Civil War started, Haller commanded George B. McClellan’s headquarters guard during the Peninsula Campaign and again in the Maryland Campaign. In May of 1863, he returned to his native York to recover from illness contracted in the field. In June, Maj. Gen. Darius N. Couch appointed Haller to command the defenses of Adams County, Pennsylvania and York County, Pennsylvania counties in south-central Pennsylvania. During the Gettysburg Campaign, Haller retreated from Gettysburg to Wrightsville, Pennsylvania, where his militia burned the covered bridge to prevent passage over the Susquehanna River by a Confederate States Army brigade under John B. Gordon.
Accused by naval officer Lt. Clark Henry Wells of disloyal conduct and sentiments after the Battle of Fredericksburg, Haller was dismissed from the service in July 1863. He eventually returned to the Northwest and became prominent in Seattle business and industry. Congressional friends convinced the Army in 1873 to convene a court of inquiry, which exonerated him. President of the President Rutherford B. Hayes helped him secure the regular army rank of colonel. Haller built a mansion in Seattle’s fashionable First Hill neighborhood. After his death at the age of 78, he was buried in Seattle's Lakeview Cemetery.
Haller Lake in the state of Washington is named for Haller's son, Theodore Haller.
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- Theodore Haller (-)
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Sources:
- Haller, Granville O., The Dismissal of Maj. Granville O. Haller of the Regular Army of the United States by Order of the Secretary of War in Special Orders, 331, of July 25, 1863. Patterson, NY: Daily Guardian Offices, 1863.
- Haller, Theodore, “Granville O. Haller,” The Washingtonian, Vol. 1, No. 3, (Tacoma: Washington State Historical Society, 1900).
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