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Essay / The Battle of Chancellorsville - 1931
Before writing this article and reading the book The Killer Angels, I didn't know much about Jeb Stuart. All I knew about him was that he was a famous Civil War cavalryman. I had no idea what the Battle of Chancellorsville was or that Stuart was in it. Now, after reading about Stuart and the Battle of Chancellorsville, I realize the influence he had on the war and what a great leader he was. In this article I will talk about the Battle of Chancellorsville, the leadership skills of Jeb Stuart and Jeb Stuart, and the Battle of Chancellorsville. Major General James Ewell Brown Stuart, cavalry leader of the Army of Northern Virginia, was born in Patrick County, Virginia, February 6, 1833. His ancestry in America began with Archibald Stuart, who sought refuge from religious persecution in western Pennsylvania in 1726, and then was removed with his family to Augusta County, Virginia, about 1738. The next generation distinguished itself by the services of Major Alexander Stuart, who fell dangerously wounded while commanding his regiment at Guilford Court House. John Alexander, son of Alexander, spent part of his life in the West, serving as a federal judge in Illinois and Missouri, and as Speaker of the House in the latter state. Jeb had a very comfortable childhood. As you have probably noticed, Jeb Stuart was introduced to the military at a very young age and began to develop a love for the lifestyle. General Stuart continued his early education at Emory and Henry College, then entered the National Military Academy of the West. Point Academy, he graduated in 1854 and was commissioned a second lieutenant in October of that year. He served in Texas against the Apaches with the mounted riflemen until transferring to the new First Cavalry in May 1855, with which he served at Fort Leavenworth. On November 14, 1855, he was married at Fort Riley to the daughter of Colonel Philip St. George Cooke and the following month he was promoted to first lieutenant. He remained on the frontier and in Kansas and was wounded in the Indian battle of Solomon's River in 1857. To Washington, in 1859, he carried secret instructions to Colonel R. E. Lee and accompanied that officer as assistant against Harper's epidemic. Perry, where he read the summons to surrender to the chief, hitherto known as "Smith," but whom he immediately recognized as "Ossawatomie" Brown of Kansas..