MANOGUE
MANSFIELD
His parents removed to Miasissippi in 1841 and he
attended Horn Lake academy, and the Univer-
sity of Nashville. He was married May 3, 1859,
to Mary Z. daughter of W. W. Wallace, of Holly
Springs, Miss., who with four sons and four daugh-
ters survived him. He removed to Arkansas in
1860, and was admitted to the bar in 1861.
He enlisted in the Confederate States army,
and was appointed captain in and subsequently
colonel of the 3d Arkansas infantry. He com-
manded Gen. John G. Walker's brigade at Rich-
mond in 1862, and when the brigade joined Gen-
eral Lee's army at Frederick, Md., he undertook
to destroy the aqueduct bridge across the Monoc-
acy. Failing in that he co-operated with Jack-
son and McLaws in the capture of Harper's Ferry
and took possession of Loudoun Heights, and on
Sept. 16, 1862, reported to General Lee at Sharps-
burg and was assigned to the extreme right of
Lee's line of battle on the 17th. The same day
the division was ordered to reinforce Jackson
when that officer ordered the division to the re-
lief of Hood and while leading his brigade and
driving Sedgwick's forces back Manning fell,
severely wounded. He was present at the battle
of the wilderness where he was captured, and he
was held a prisoner of war by the U.S. govern-
ment until August, 1865. He was a representative
from the second district of Mississippi in the 45th,
4Gth and 47th congresses, 1877-83, and in 1883
took up the practice of law in Washington, D.C.
He died at Broadville, Md. Nov. 3, 1892.
MANOGUE, -Patrick, R.C. bishop, was born in Desart, county Kilkenny, Ireland, March 15, 1831. He attended school at Callan ; immi- grated to the United States in 1856 and was graduated from the University of St. Mary of the Lake, Chicago, 111. He removed to California, where he was superintendent and part owner of a mine at Moores Flat, Nevada county. Deciding to enter the priesthood, he returned to Europe, and attended the seminary of St. Sulpice, Paris. He was ordained, Dec. 25, 1861, at the seminary, returned to California, and was pastor in charge of St. Mary's church, Virginia City, in 1862, with jurisdiction over the entire country afterward comprised in the State of Nevada ; was vicar-general of the diocese of Grass Valley for a number of years, and built for St. Mary's parish, Virginia City, one of the finest churches on the Pacific coast. He was appointed titular bishop of Cremos and coadjutor to Bishop O'Connell, Nov. 28, 1880, and was consecrated at San Francisco, Cal., Jan. 16, 1881, by Archbishop Alemany and Bishops Mora and O'Connell. He succeeded Bishop O'Connell to the diocese of Grass Valley, Feb. 29, 1884, his jurisdiction be- coming the diocese of Sacramento, May 28, 1886. He died at Sacramento, Cal., Feb. 27, 1895.
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MANSFIELD, Edward Deering, editor mi
author, was born in New Haven, Conn., Aug. 17,
1801 ; son of Jared (q.v.) and Eliztibeth (Phipps)
Mansfield, and grandson of David and Mary
(English) Phipps. He was graduated at the U.S.
Military academy and
promoted 2d lieuten-
ant in the corps of
engineers, July 1,
1819. He declined
the commission, was
prepared for college
by Mr. Hooker, of
Farmington, Conn.,
and was graduated
at the College of
New Jersey, A.B.
1822, and A.M. 1825.
studied law with
Judge Gould in Litch-
field, 1823-25, and
practised in Connec-
ticut until May, 1826, and in Cincinnati, Ohio. 1826
-36. He was married first in 1830, to Mary Peck of
Litchfield, Conn., and secondly, April 24, 1839, to
Margaret, daughter of Thomas and Eleanor
Worthington, of Adena, Ohio. He was professor
of constitutional law and history in Cincinnati
college, 1836 ; and editor of the Cincinnati
Chronicle, 1836-48 ; of the Chronicle and Atlas,
1849-52, and of the Railroad Record, 1852-72. He
was also editor of the Cincinnati Gazette for
some time and was a constant contributor to
that journal, 1855-80, and during the civil war
regularly contributed to the New York Times,
signing his articles " A Veteran Observer." He
was a commissioner of statistics for the state of
Ohio, 1859-68, and an associate of the Society
Frangaise de Statistique Universelle, 1846-80.
He received the degree A.M. from the College of
New Jersey in 1835, and that of LL.D. from
Marietta college, Ohio, in 1853. He is the author
of : A Discourse on the Utility of Mathematics
(1834) ; A Treatise on Constitutional Law (1835) ;
Political Grammar of the United States (1885) ;
TJie Legal Rights, Duties and Liabilities of Mar-
ried Women (1845) ; Tlie Life of Gen. Winfield
Scott (1848); TJie HUtory of the Mexican War
(1849); American Education (\^TA) ', The Memoirs
of Daniel Drake (1855) ; A Popular Life of Gen.
Ulysses 8. Grant (1868) ; Personal Memoirs, ex-
tending to the year 1841 (1870), and joint author
with Benjamin Drake of Cincinnati in 1826. He
died at Morrow, Ohio. Oct. 27, 1880.
MANSFIELD, Jared, mathematician, was born in New Haven, Conn., May 2. 1759 ; son of Stephen and Hannah (Beach) Mansfield ; grandson of Jonathan and Sarah (Ailing) Mansfield, and a descendant of Richard Mansfield, of Devonshire,