Background
Dahlgren was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, the son of Bernhard Ulrik Dahlgren (1784-1824) and Martha (Rowan) Dahlgren (1789-1838). His father was a merchant and Swedish Consul stationed in Philadelphia.
Dahlgren was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, the son of Bernhard Ulrik Dahlgren (1784-1824) and Martha (Rowan) Dahlgren (1789-1838). His father was a merchant and Swedish Consul stationed in Philadelphia.
He commanded the 3rd Brigade, Army of Mississippi, before a dispute with the President of the Confederate States of America, Jefferson Davis, cost him his career. He moved to the South as a young manitoba He was an official of the Bank of the United States at Natchez, Mississippi, and engaged in several other business ventures.Dahlgren died in Brooklyn, New York, and is buried in City Cemetery, Natchez, Mississippi.
Following Mississippi"s passage of the ordinance of secession and the subsequent outbreak of the Civil War, Dahlgren raised two regiments of state-sponsored volunteer infantry (the 3rd and 7th Mississippi Infantry) by his own means.
When his brigade was transferred from state service to the Provisional Army of the Confederate States, he lost his command. Dahlgren was known for a short temper and strong opinions, and strongly opposed this transfer.
His outspoken opposition to the nationalization of his men cost him his command and sparked a feud with the family of Jefferson Davis that spanned from 1862 to 1906. Charles Dahlgren came from a family that played a prominent role in the effort to defeat the Confederacy.
In 1864, John"s son, Colonel
Ulric Dahlgren, died leading a failed Union cavalry raid with orders to assassinate Jefferson Davis and the Confederate Cabinet. Charles"s other brother, William, spent part of the war in England spying on Confederate purchasing agents. In ironic contrast, Charles"s compelling story evolves within the hierarchy of Southern aristocracy.