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词条 Alexander Schimmelfennig
释义

  1. Early life and career

  2. Civil War

  3. See also

  4. Notes

  5. References

  6. Further reading

  7. External links

{{Infobox military person
|name= Alexander Schimmelfennig
|birth_date= {{birth date|1824|7|20}}
|death_date= {{death date and age|1865|9|5|1824|7|20}}
|image= Alexander Schimmelfennig.jpg
|caption=
|nickname=
|birth_place= Bromberg, Prussia, (now Poland)
|death_place= Wernersville, Pennsylvania
|placeofburial= Charles Evans Cemetery,
Reading, Pennsylvania
|placeofburial_label= Place of burial
|allegiance= United States of America
Union
|branch= United States Army
Union Army
|serviceyears= 1861–1865
|rank= Brigadier General
|unit=
|commands=
|battles= American Civil War
  • Battle of Chancellorsville
  • Battle of Gettysburg
  • Siege of Charleston Harbor
  • Battle of Grimball's Causeway

|awards=
|relations=
|laterwork=
}}

Alexander Schimmelfennig (July 20, 1824 – September 5, 1865) was a German soldier and political revolutionary; then he became a Union Army general in the American Civil War.

Early life and career

Schimmelfennig was born in Bromberg (now Bydgoszcz) in the Grand Duchy of Posen, Kingdom of Prussia. He joined the Prussian army and served in both the 29th Infantry Regiment "von Horn" (3rd Rhenish) and the 16th Infantry Regiment "Freiherr von Sparr" (3rd Westphalian), the latter of which was garrisoned in Cologne. In Cologne he became acquainted with some of the more radical German political groups and was an active participant in the 1848 revolution, but was disillusioned by the outcome of the peace treaty that ended the First Schleswig War.{{citation needed|reason=need a source that actually states that, he has fled Germany by that time.|date=August 2017}}

He supported the March Revolution and was a member of the Palatine military commission that led the Palatine uprising.[1] He was twice wounded in the Battle of Rinnthal, rescued, following which he fled to Switzerland.[2] For his involvement in the revolutionary movement, he was tried in absentia and sentenced to death by the Prussian authorities.{{citation needed|reason=Palatinate was Bavarian land, and they led the court proceedings.|date=August 2017}} He remained in exile in Switzerland, where he met fellow expatriate Carl Schurz, and ultimately they fled together to London via Paris. While in London, Schimmelfenning became a part of the German democratic movement, a sectarian group within the Communist League led by Karl Schapper and August Willich that was in opposition to the main body of the Communist League led by Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels.[3]

In 1854, Schimmelfennig emigrated to the United States and afterwards gained employment with the War Department. Here he maintained his association with the Forty-Eighters, a group of military officers in the failed revolutions of 1848 who had fled to the United States; many ended up serving in the Union Army. He was the author of a book on the Crimean War titled The War between Russia and Turkey (Philadelphia, 1854).

Civil War

After his efforts with Carl Schurz to raise an all-German cavalry regiment failed (due to Schurz's appointment by President Abraham Lincoln to be his Minister to Spain), Schimmelfennig attempted to raise an all-German regiment in Philadelphia. When he fell ill, others strove to take over control of this new regiment but they failed, thanks to the efforts of Schimmelfennig's friends. The regiment, consisting of Philadelphia and Pittsburgh Germans, was called the 1st German Regiment (of Pennsylvania) and would later be designated the 74th Pennsylvania Infantry[4]

At the time of the Civil War, there was strong nativist sentiment in the Union. This prejudice was directed toward the German troops of the XI Corps, who retreated en masse after they were flanked by Stonewall Jackson at Chancellorsville. The mostly German corps took the brunt of the scorn that poured forth from the press. Among the critics was the corps commander Oliver Otis Howard, who sought a scapegoat for his own mistakes. During the battle, Schimmelfennig commanded a brigade in the 3rd Division of the XI Corps.

At the subsequent Battle of Gettysburg, Schimmelfennig commanded a brigade in fellow Forty-Eighter-turned-major general Carl Schurz's 3rd Division of the XI Corps. For a short time, Schimmelfennig took command of the 3rd Division when Schurz briefly commanded the corps. His brigade suffered greatly, mostly due to a high prisoner rate as hundreds of men became confused in the narrow streets of Gettysburg and ended up being captured by oncoming Confederates. It and Colonel Charles Coster's brigade did their best to cover the retreat of the rest of the XI Corps, but they soon became disorganized and fled too. During the retreat through the town, Schimmelfennig briefly hid in a culvert on Baltimore Street, and then stayed for several days in a shed on the Henry and Catherine Garlach property,[5] avoiding capture. (There is a marker outside the Garlach house commemorating this event.) After the battle, he rejoined the corps, much to the joy of the troops who thought he was dead. However, Schimmelfennig's story was seized upon by news writers and presented as another example of German cowardice.

After the Battle of Gettysburg, from mid-July until early August 1863, Schimmelfennig was moved to command a brigade in 1st Division, XI Corps. He and his brigade were reassigned to the Southern District of the Department of the South, in the Carolinas, serving on Folly Island.[6] He commanded the District of Charleston, then part of the X Corps during Sherman's March to the Sea. After being sidelined for some time by a bout with malaria, Schimmelfennig had the honor of accepting Charleston's surrender on February 18, 1865. His headquarters was the Miles Brewton House. During his time of service in the swamps about Charleston, he contracted a virulent form of tuberculosis[7] which ultimately led to his death in Wernersville, Pennsylvania, where he visited a mineral springs sanatorium in an effort to find a cure.

Schimmelfennig is buried in Reading, Pennsylvania, in the Charles Evans Cemetery, not far from fellow Union general David McMurtrie Gregg.[8]

See also

{{Portal|Biography|United States Army|American Civil War}}
  • List of American Civil War generals (Union)
  • German Americans in the Civil War

Notes

1. ^"Campaign for the Imperial German Constitution" contained in the Collected Works of Karl Marx and Frederick Engels: Volume 10 (International Publishers: New York, 1978) pp. 210-213.
2. ^Biographical note contained in the Collected Works of Karl Marx and Frederick Engels: Volume 10, p. 733,
3. ^Biographical note contained in the Collected Works of Karl Marx and Frederick Engels: Volume 10, p. 733.
4. ^74th PA website.
5. ^Bennett, Jerry. Days of Uncertainty and Dread
6. ^Eicher, p. 472.
7. ^Warner, p. 424; Eicher, p. 472.
8. ^{{Find a Grave|5841917|Gen Alexander Schimmelfennig}}

References

  • Bostick, Douglas W., Charleston Under Siege: the Impregnable City, Charleston: History Press, 2010.
  • Eicher, John H., and David J. Eicher. Civil War High Commands. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2001. {{ISBN|0-8047-3641-3}}.
  • Warner, Ezra J. Generals in Blue: Lives of the Union Commanders. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1964. {{ISBN|0-8071-0822-7}}.

Further reading

  • Carl Schurz. {{ws|Reminiscences (3 volumes)}} New York: The McClure Company. 1907. Schurz knew Schimmelfennig (or Schimmelpfennig — it is spelled both ways in his Reminiscences) in Germany and in the United States and places in between. In Chapter VIII of Volume One, Schurz reflects on the irony of commanding Schimmelfennig in the United States who was Schurz's military instructor in Germany. They were also both members of the Brüning Salon in England (see Chapter XIV of Volume One).
  • Abraham Jacobi relates an encounter in Germany with Schimmelfennig in his speech {{ws|“Young Germany in the Storm and Stress Period”}} (Banquet to the Honorable Carl Schurz. March 2, 1899)
  • {{Cite Appletons'|wstitle=Schimmelpfennig, Alexander |short=x |notaref=x}}

External links

  • Photograph of Schimmelfennig's grave site
{{Gettysburg figures|state=collapsed}}{{Authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Schimmelfennig, Alexander}}

12 : 1824 births|1865 deaths|Burials at Charles Evans Cemetery|People from Bydgoszcz|People from the Province of Posen|Union Army generals|People of New York (state) in the American Civil War|German-American Forty-Eighters|19th-century deaths from tuberculosis|Infectious disease deaths in Pennsylvania|German communists|American communists

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