The Greenes of Rhode Island, with historical records of English ancestry, 1534-1902;
(This is a reproduction of a book published before 1923. T...)
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George Sears Greene was one of the oldest field commanders in the Federal army during the Civil War. He served with distinction in several key campaigns and battles, including the Northern Virginia Campaign and the Battles of Antietam, Chancellorsville, and Gettysburg.
Background
George Sears Greene was born on May 6, 1801 at Apponaug, Rhode Island. He was the son of Caleb Greene and his wife Sarah Robinson, daughter of Thomas and Sarah (Wickes) Greene, was descended from John Greene, who came to America in 1635, was one of the founders of Warwick, Rhode Island, and established a notable family. Caleb Greene was a shipowner, whose once prosperous business was ruined by the Embargo and the war.
Education
It was intended that George should enter Brown University, but lack of money made this impossible.
He was appointed a cadet at West Point in 1819, graduated in 1823, and was commissioned in the artillery.
Career
George went to New York where he found work. Returning to the Military Academy immediately, to teach mathematics, he remained there for nearly four years, except for a few months when he was teaching at the Artillery School at Fort Monroe. Leaving West Point finally in 1827, he served for several years at various artillery posts in New England.
He was promoted to first lieutenant in 1829. Resigning from the army, June 30, 1836, he took up engineering as a profession, engaging particularly in railroad construction.
At the outbreak of the Civil War he was engineer in charge of the Croton water-works extension and the Croton Reservoir in Central Park, New York. He was appointed colonel of the 60th New York, January 18, 1862, and served with his regiment in the neighborhood of Washington until appointed brigadier-general of volunteers, April 28, 1862. He was then assigned to a brigade under Gen. Banks, in the Shenandoah Valley, and commanded it in action for the first time at Cedar Mountain in August. At Antietam, by virtue of seniority, he commanded a division, and then resumed command of his brigade, which was reorganized in April 1863 so as to be composed entirely of New York regiments. He fought at Chancellorsville, and with great distinction at Gettysburg. With the XII Corps he arrived on the battlefield at Gettysburg late in the afternoon of the first day’s fighting, was posted at Culp’s Hill, on the extreme right of the Union line, and helped to resist the Confederate attacks of the second day.
That evening the entire corps, with the exception of Greene’s brigade, was withdrawn in order to strengthen the Union left, and for a time this brigade bore the whole brunt of the renewed attacks of the Confederates, who could have placed themselves across the Union line of communications if the Culp’s Hill position were carried. The safety of the army, therefore, depended upon Greene’s brigade, until, little by little, it was strengthened by troops sent from other commands. It was again in action on the third day of the battle.
In September, the XII Corps was transferred to Tennessee and Greene served with it in the early part of the Chattanooga campaign. He was severely wounded, however, at Wauhatchie, October 28, 1863, being shot through the face, and saw no further field service until 1865. His wound made necessary a difficult operation in May 1864, and when he had recovered sufficiently to be fit for duty of any kind he was employed on courts martial. He commanded a brigade in the North Carolina campaign of March and April 1865, and marched in the great review at Washington.
After being mustered out of the volunteer service, April 30, 1866, he resumed the practise of his profession in New York, where he did extensive work in connection with the water supply, the elevated railways, and the laying out of new streets. He was engaged on important engineering operations elsewhere, also, notably the planning of the sewerage system of Washington and the construction or extension of water-supply systems in Detroit, Troy, and Yonkers. He was one of the founders of the American Society of Civil Engineers, and its president from 1875 to 1877.
His interests were not confined to professional matters. He collected the bulk of the material for a genealogical account of the Greene family, which was completed and published after his death, and he was deeply interested in the affairs of the United States Military Academy, of which he became the “oldest living graduate, ” a distinction in which he took the keenest delight. In 1894, by virtue of a special act of Congress, he returned to the regular army as a first lieutenant, the rank which he held at the time of his resignation in 1836, and was placed on the retired list.
He died at Morristown, New Jersey, where he had resided since 1883, and was buried at Warwick, Rhode Island.
Achievements
As a civilian, George was one of the founders of the American Society of Civil Engineers and Architects and was responsible for numerous railroads and aqueduct construction projects in the northeastern United States.
During the American Civil War, he took part in the Northern Virginia Campaign, the Battle of Antietam, and the Battle of Chancellorsville. His most notable contribution during the war was his defense of the Union right flank at Culp's Hill during the Battle of Gettysburg.
(This is a reproduction of a book published before 1923. T...)
Membership
He was a member of the New York Genealogical and Biographical Society.
Personality
Harsh in manner and a strict disciplinarian, he was not a man to win immediate affection, but those under him soon learned to appreciate his ability and his rigid sense of justice.
Connections
On July 14, 1828, he was married, at Pomfret, Connecticut, to Elizabeth Vinton, who died in 1832. On Feburary 21, 1837, he married Martha Barrett Dana, daughter of Hon. Samuel Dana.