William B. Hazen: Difference between revisions
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[[Image:WilliamBHazen(1).jpg|thumb|300px|right|William B. Hazen, Library of Congress]] | [[Image:WilliamBHazen(1).jpg|thumb|300px|right|William B. Hazen, Library of Congress]] | ||
'''William Babcock Hazen (1830-1887)''' - Born 27 Sep 1830, West Hartford, Vermont. Died 16 Jan 1887, Washington, D.C. and buried in [[Category:Arlington National Cemetery|Arlington National Cemetery]]. | '''William Babcock Hazen (1830-1887)''' - Born 27 Sep 1830, West Hartford, Vermont. Died 16 Jan 1887, Washington, D.C. and buried in [[:Category:Arlington National Cemetery|Arlington National Cemetery]]. | ||
Hazen received an appointment to the [[:Category:United States Military Academy|United States Military Academy]] at West Point in 1851, graduated 1 Jul 1855, and was assigned to the [[4th U.S. Infantry]] as a brevet 2nd lieutenant. | Hazen received an appointment to the [[:Category:United States Military Academy|United States Military Academy]] at West Point in 1851, graduated 1 Jul 1855, and was assigned to the [[4th U.S. Infantry]] as a brevet 2nd lieutenant. | ||
Revision as of 15:42, 4 November 2005

William Babcock Hazen (1830-1887) - Born 27 Sep 1830, West Hartford, Vermont. Died 16 Jan 1887, Washington, D.C. and buried in Arlington National Cemetery.
Hazen received an appointment to the United States Military Academy at West Point in 1851, graduated 1 Jul 1855, and was assigned to the 4th U.S. Infantry as a brevet 2nd lieutenant.
Rogue River Indian War
His first duty assignment was at Fort Reading, Shasta County, California. During the Rogue River Indian War he was assigned to Fort Lane in southwestern Oregon, where he was engaged in skirmishes at Applegate Creek on 3 Jan 1856, and at Big Kanyon on 12 Feb 1856. Hazen conducted the Rogue River Indians to the Grande Ronde Reservation that same year. He sited and began construction on Fort Yamhill, Oregon, in 1856. He left Fort Yamhill in April 1857 to join his regiment in Texas and was replaced by Lt. Philip H. Sheridan who continued the construction on Fort Yamhill.
Texas Frontier
In 1858 he was on frontier duty conducting recruits to Texas, with his headquarters at Fort Davis, Jeff Davis County, Texas. In 1859 he was engaged in scouting and participated in actions against Kickapoo Indians on 20 Mar and 5 Oct 1859 and against Comanches on 3 Nov 1859. In the action against the Comanches Lt. Hazen was severely wounded but he remained in the field for four days before he was placed upon a horse and sent back to Fort Inge.
U.S. Civil War Years
At the start of the U.S. Civil War 2nd Lt. Hazen was assistant instructor of infantry tactics at the United States Military Academy. He remained there until 18 Sep 1861 and was promoted in April to 1st Lt., to captain on 14 May. He recruited the 41st U.S. Ohio Volunteer Infantry Regiment, and became its colonel on 29 Oct 1861.
He defended the Ohio frontier and took part in operations in Kentucky. He took command of a brigade on 6 Jan 1862, and served with distinction at the Battle of Shiloh on 6-7 Apr 1862; he was in the siege of Corinth 29 Apr to 5 Jun of that year. In the battle of Stone's River, 12 Oct 1862, he protected the left wing of the army from being turned by simultaneous assaults in front and flank. In the operations resulting in the battle of Chickamauga Hazen commanded a brigade, and at Missionary Ridge he captured eighteen pieces of artillery.
General Hazen marched with Sherman from Atlanta to the sea, and later north through Columbia. He participated in thirteen campaigns, became a brigadier general of volunteers 29 Nov 1862 and a major general two years later. He was brevetted after the battle of Chickamauga, the battle of Chattanooga, in the capture of Atlanta, after his capture of Fort McAllister, and he became a brevet major general, 13 Mar 1865.
At the end of the war in the grand review of the Federal army in Washington D.C., General Hazen marched at the head of the Fifteenth Corps of the Army of the Tennessee.
The Indian Resettlement
(insert resettlement text)
General Hazen was granted leave of absence on 29 Aug 1870 for the purpose of going abroad as military observer with the German army during the Franco-Prussian War. At Brussels, 22 Sep 1870, Hazen was given permission to join the German armies by Lord Chancellor Count Bismarck. Hazen's leave expired 20 Jan 1871, he took command of Fort Gibson ten days later.
General Hazen married Miss Mildred McLean 15 Feb 1871, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Washington McLean of Cincinnati, and sister of John R. McLean, editor of the Cincinnati Enquirer. Miss McLean had been educated by governesses and at the Ursulin Convent; she was very accomplished, speaking French, German and Italian. The Hazens occupied the large stone headquarters house at Fort Gibson, and the arrival of the bride caused quite a sensation in the frontier village. Accounts of persons living there at the time say Mrs. Hazen was accompanied by a French maid to care for her and her ten trunks of finery. She is said to have been the most stylish woman who ever lived at that post. She mingled freely with the women of Fort Gibson and was popular. She was a fine horse woman and frequently went on hunts for deer and turkey; at times she even hunted bear and buffalo.
Hazen was in command of Fort Gibson from 30 Jan, to 30 Sep 1871. General Pope ordered Fort Gibson abandoned on 25 Sep 1871, the four companies of the 6th U.S. Infantry left the post for Fort Hays. General Hazen formally evacuated Fort Gibson on 30 Sep 1871 for Fort Hays on Big Creek, Kansas. In 1874 he was in command of Fort Buford, Dakota Territory, near the mouth of the Yellowstone River.
From Fort Buford General Hazen was sent as military attache to Austria; he made his headquarters at Vienna from 1 Sep 1877, to 1878. During the time he was abroad he served as observer during the Turko-Russian War (1876-1877).
The 1880 U.S. Census shows General Hazen back at Fort Buford with his brother but without his wife.
Chief Signal Officer
On 3 Nov 1880 President Rutherford B. Hayes appointed Hazen Chief Signal Officer with headquarters in the War Department. He served in this post from 15 Dec 1880, to 16 Jan 1887. A significant portion of his duties involved the flegling weather service and he employed scientists as observers, introducing cold wave signals and suggested the standard-time meridians at present in use. He established the use of local and railway weather signals, organized special observations for cotton producing states and warnings of frost.
Father: Stillman Hazen (1792-1880) Born 3 Aug 1792 in Hartford, Virginia. Died 12 Jun 1880 in Hiram, Ohio.
Mother: Ferona Fenno (1796-1864) Born 17 Sep 1796 in Westmoreland, New Hampshire. Died 23 Sep 1864 in Talleyrand, Iowa
Marriage:
- Mildred McLean (1850-1931) Married 15 Feb 1871 in Cincinnati, Ohio. Born 1850, Cincinnati, Ohio. Died 21 Feb 1931.
Children:
- John McLean Hazen (1876-1898) Born 24 Oct 1876. Died 25 Sep 1898.
Assignments:
- (1851-1855) Cadet, United States Military Academy, Class of 1855
- (1855-????) Bvt. 2nd Lt., 4th U.S. Infantry, Fort Reading, Shasta County, California
- (????-1856) Bvt. 2nd Lt., 4th U.S. Infantry, Fort Lane, Oregon
- (1856-1857) ????, 4th U.S. Infantry, Fort Yamhill, Oregon
- (1857-1858) ????, ????, on leave awaiting orders
- (1859-????) ????, ????, Fort Inge, Texas
- (????-1861) 2nd Lt., United States Military Academy, Asst. Instructor of Infantry Tactics
- (1861-1864) Col. (29 Oct 1861), 41st U.S. Ohio Volunteer Infantry Regiment
- (1864-????) Bvt. Maj. Gen. (13 Dec 1864)
- (1865-1866)
- (1866-????) Col., Bvt. Maj. Gen., 38th U.S. Infantry
- (1868-1869) Col., Bvt. Maj. Gen., Fort Cobb
- (1869-1870) Col., Bvt. Maj. Gen., 6th U.S. Infantry, Fort Sill
- (1870-1871) Col., Bvt. Maj. Gen., military observer with the German army during the Franco-Prussian War
- (1871-1871) Col., Bvt. Maj. Gen., 6th U.S. Infantry, Fort Gibson, Oklahoma
- (1871-1874) Col., Bvt. Maj. Gen., 6th U.S. Infantry, Fort Hays, Kansas
- (1874-1877) Col., Bvt. Maj. Gen., 6th U.S. Infantry, Fort Buford, Dakota Territory
- (1877-1878) military attache to Austria
- (1878-1880) Col., Bvt. Maj. Gen., 6th U.S. Infantry, Fort Buford, Dakota Territory
- (1880-1887) Col., Bvt. Maj. Gen., Chief Signal Officer, U.S. War Department
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