Everything about Fitz John Porter totally explained
Fitz John Porter (
August 31,
1822 –
May 21,
1901) (sometimes written
FitzJohn Porter) was a career
U.S. Army officer and a
Union general in the
American Civil War. His military career was ruined by an unjust court martial called by political rivals.
Early life
Porter was born in
Portsmouth, New Hampshire. He came from a family prominent in naval service; his cousins were
William D. Porter,
David Dixon Porter, and
David G. Farragut. Nevertheless, he pursued an army career. He graduated from the
U.S. Military Academy in 1845 and was commissioned a
second lieutenant in the 4th U.S. Artillery. He served in the
Mexican-American War and was
breveted to
captain for bravery at the
Battle of Molino del Rey. He was wounded at
Chapultepec, for which he also received a brevet promotion to
major.
Civil War
After the start of the Civil War, Porter became chief of staff and assistant adjutant general for the Department of
Pennsylvania, but he was almost immediately promoted to colonel of the 15th Infantry on
May 14,
1861, and then to
brigadier general three days later. He received division command in the
Army of the Potomac, newly formed under
Maj. Gen. George B. McClellan, on
August 28,
1861. This association with the soon-to-be-controversial McClellan would prove to be a disaster for Porter's military career. He commanded the division at the beginning of the
Peninsula Campaign, seeing action at the
Siege of Yorktown. McClellan created two provisional corps and Porter was assigned to command the
V Corps. During the
Seven Days Battles, and particularly at the
Battle of Gaines' Mill, he displayed an excellent talent for defensive fighting. At the
Battle of Malvern Hill he played a leading role. For his successful performance on the Peninsula he was promoted to major general of volunteers on
July 4,
1862.
Porter's corps was sent to reinforce Maj. Gen.
John Pope in the
Northern Virginia Campaign, a reassignment that he openly challenged and complained about, criticizing Pope personally. During the
Second Battle of Bull Run, on
August 29,
1862, he was ordered to attack the flank and rear of Maj. Gen.
Thomas J. "Stonewall" Jackson's wing of the
Army of Northern Virginia. Porter had stopped at Dawkin's Branch where he'd encountered Maj. Gen.
J.E.B. Stuart's cavalry screen. He received a message from Pope directing him to attack the
Confederate right (which Pope assumed to be Jackson on Stony Ridge), but at the same time to maintain contact with the neighboring division under Maj. Gen.
John F. Reynolds, a conflict in orders that couldn't be resolved. Pope was apparently unaware that Confederate Maj. Gen.
James Longstreet's wing of the army had arrived on the battlefield and the proposed envelopment of Jackson's position would have collided suicidally with Longstreet's large force. Porter chose not to make the attack because of the intelligence he'd received that Longstreet was to his immediate front. Pope was infuriated and accused Porter of insubordination.
Porter remained in command of the corps through the
Maryland Campaign and the corps served in a reserve position at the
Battle of Antietam. He is famously said to have told McClellan, "Remember, General, I command the last reserve of the last Army of the Republic." McClellan took his implied advice and failed to commit his reserves into a battle that might have been won if he'd used his forces aggressively.
On
November 25,
1862, Porter was arrested and
court-martialed for his actions at Second Bull Run. By this time, Gen. McClellan had been relieved by
President Abraham Lincoln and couldn't provide political cover for his protégé. In fact, Porter's association with the disgraced McClellan and his open criticism of Pope were significant reasons for his conviction at court-martial. The officers of the court were appointed by
Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton, who detested McClellan, and most of those officers received promotions after they delivered their verdict. Porter was found guilty on
January 10,
1863, of disobedience and misconduct, and he was dismissed from the Army on
January 21,
1863.
Postbellum
Porter spent most of the remainder of his life fighting against this injustice. In 1878, a special commission under General
John M. Schofield exonerated Porter by finding that his reluctance to attack Longstreet probably saved Pope's
Army of Virginia from an even greater defeat. Eight years later, President
Chester A. Arthur reversed Porter's sentence and a special act of the
U.S. Congress restored Porter's commission as an infantry colonel in the U.S. Army, backdated to
May 14,
1861, but without any back pay due. Two days later,
August 7,
1886, Porter, vindicated, retired from the Army at his own request.
After the war, Porter was involved in mining, construction, and commerce. He served as the
New York City Commissioner of Public Works, the New York City Police Commissioner, and the New York City Fire Commissioner. He died in
Morristown, New Jersey, and is buried in
Green-Wood Cemetery,
Brooklyn, New York.
In 1904, a statue of Porter designed by artist
James E. Kelly was dedicated in Haven Park in
Portsmouth, New Hampshire.
Further Information
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