HALLECK
HALLECK
1847); The Croato-s (1860) ; Young America, a
Poem (1865) ; and The Poetical Writings of Fitz-
Greene Halleck (1869). He died at Guilford,
Conn., Nov. 19, 1867.
HALLECK, Henry Wager, soldier, was born in Westernville, N.Y., Jan. 16, 1815. He was a descendant of Peter Halleck (or Hallock) of Long Island, 1640, and of Henry Wager, an early- settler of central New York. He matriculated at Union college, and was graduated at the U.S. military academy in 1839, third in a class of thirty-one. He was appointed 3d lieutenant in the engineer corps and was retained at the academy as assist- ant professor of en- gineering and on July 28, 1840, was trans- ferred to the board of engineers, Washing- ton, D.C., as assistant. He was engaged on the fortifications in New York harbor, 1840—47, and during the period visited Europe on a tour of inspection of public works. He was
promoted 1st lieutenant in 1845 and in 1847 was ordered to California as engineer for the western coast. He sailed on tlie transport Lexington, landed at Monterey, Cal., which he made a mili- tary base by fortifying tiie port, and which also became the rendezvous of the Pacific squadron. He accompanied several expeditions; was chief of stafl" to Colonel Burton, and took j^art in vari- ous skirmishes lu Lower California in November, 1847; commanded the volmiteers who marched to San Antonio, and on March 16, 1848, surprised the Mexican garrison and engaged in a skirmish at Todos Santos, March 30; and aided Commodore Shubrick, U.S.N., in the capture of Mazatlan, of which place he was for a time lieutenant-gov- ernor. He was brevetted captain to date from May 1, 1847, for " gallant and meritorious ser- vices " in these engagements. He was military secretary to military governors Mason and Riley and was commended for " great energy, high ad- ministrative qualities, excellent judgment and admirable adaptability to his varied and onerous duties." He was a member of the convention that met at Monterey, Sept. 1, 1849, to frame a constitution for California, wrote the instrument, and refused to represent the state in the U.S. senate, preferring to continue his service in the army as aide-de-camp on the staff of General Riley. He was inspector and engineer of light- houses. 1853-53; a member of the board of engi
neers for fortifications on the Pacific coast, 1853-
54; was promoted captain of engineers, July 1,
1853, and resigned from the army, Aug. 1, 1854,
to become head of a law firm of San Francisco,
with large landed interests in the state. He was
director -general of the New Almaden quicksil-
ver mines, 1850-61 ; president of the Pacific &
Atlantic railroad from San Jose to San Francisco,
1855-61 ; major-general of the state militia, 1860-
61, and early in 1861 was appointed at the urgent
recommendation of General Scott, major-general
in the U.S. army, his commission dating from
Aug. 19, 1861. He was commander of the depart-
ment of Missouri, which embraced western Ken-
tucky, Illinois, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa,
Missouri and Arkansas, with headquarters at St.
Louis. He brought to this position a military
training and experience that in three months
placed the Federal army in possession of all the
territory under his control, save southern Mis-
souri and western Kentucky, and then, with the
aid of the gunboat flotilla of Admiral Foote and
the army of General Grant, he began the military
operations that resulted in the capture of Forts
Henry and Donelson; the possession of Bowling
Green, Columbus and Nashville, of New Madrid,
Columbus and Island No. 10 on the Mississippi,
and of the whole of Missouri and northern
Arkansas, establishing the Federal army on a line
extending from Chattanooga to Memphis. The
departments of Kansas and Ohio were placed
in his department, March 11, 1862, and the whole
became known as the department of the Missis-
sippi, which included the territory between the
AUeghan}^ and Rocky mountains. After the
battle of Shiloh, General Halleck personally took
the field and moved against Corinth, which had
been fortified by the Confederate army, and on
reaching the place May 30, it fell into his hands
without an assault, the enemy having evacuated
the place. He directed the pursuit of the fleeing
Confederates, General Pope following up the
direct retreat, while Sherman marched to Mem-
phis, already captured by the gunboats before his
arrival, and Buell marched against Chattanooga.
He held the fortifications at Corinth, repaired
railroad communications, and prepared to operate
against Vicksburg, when on July 23 he accepted
the appointment, made by President Lincoln, as
general-in-chief of the armies of the United States
with headquarters at Washington, D.C. He at
once ordered the withdrawal of McClellan's army
from the Peninsula and his letter to that com-
mander under date of Oct. 38, 1863, was the only
official explanation of the removal of McClellan
from the command of the army of the Potomac,
Nov. 7, 1863. When General Grant was made
lieutenant general March 13, 1864, by special act
of congress creating the rank for him, General