Sat Oct 13, 2007 11:52 am
My initial guesses were Halleck and Sam Cooper. However, in the back of my mind I knew of the US general who surrendered his forces to the State of Texas. I thought that the guy's name was Haney.
KillCalvalry, I think that your conclusion on Twigg's conduct in 1861 is perhaps too kind. Twiggs was in a difficult position because he could not reconcile his duties as an officer in the US army with his beliefs in States' Rights. In the end, he surrendered his command, which represented 20% of the standing US army, together with all of its cannon, supplies and forts without firing a shot. Had his second in command, a New Yorker, been in command it is doubtful that he would gone down without a fight or at the very least without destroying his equipment and supplies. Certainly, this is what the officials of the State of Texas believed.
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'Nous voilà, Lafayette'
Colonel C.E. Stanton, aide to A.E.F. commander John 'Black Jack' Pershing, upon the landing of the first US troops in France 1917