The Center
for
Socratic
Principles:
The New
Whig
Party
Home
WhigCentral
The
NWP Quiz
The
American
Pageant Quiz
The
US Consitution, Bill of Rights, and the Amendments
Essays
The
NWP on
Yahoo!
The
Center's
Sponsors
A
News
Article I Liked
Send
us your
Comments
|
Major General Winfield Scott
Ol' Fuss 'n' Feathers
Born in 1786 near Petersburg,
Virginia, Winfield Scott's father was a successful farmer who had served
in the Revolutionary War. His mother came from a wealthy Virginia family.
Though both his parents died when he was young, Scott's inheritance was
m odest. He studied for a short time at William and Mary College before
undertaking the study of law in Petersburg. He practiced law and served
in the army in the period prior to the War of 1812. With the outbreak of
the War of 1812, Scott recruited a regiment and was promoted to the rank
of lieutenant colonel. He served on the northern front, and his bravery
and energy brought him honors and promotion,
as he was brevetted a major general.
After the war, Scott studied
European military methods, wrote on military and other subjects, and took
up headquarters in New York City. He returned to active duty with the Black
Hawk War in 1832, and was commissioned by President Andrew Jackson to pr
oceed to South Carolina to watch over the nullification movement. Other
military actions involved the controversial Seminole and Creek conflict
in 1835, in which he clashed with Jackson, and a more celebrated role in
restoring tranquility on the Canadian border during Martin Van Buren's
presidency. Owing to his prominence as a military leader as well as a potential
Whig presidential candidate, Scott was made general-in-chief of the army
in 1841.
It was the Mexican War that
brought Scott lasting renown. He was ordered to Mexico in November 1846.
Obstructed by poorly equipped troops, limited reinforcements and supplies,
desertions, and disease, Scott nevertheless undertook a successful five-mo
nth campaign from Vera Cruz to Mexico City. But feuds generated by ambitious
subordinate officers and, especially, the hostility of the Polk administration
to further honoring a Whig general, led to Scott's recall and replacement.
In addition, a court of inquiry was established to investigate Sc ott's
actions in disciplining those disloyal officers. The charges against Scott
were eventually dropped, and Congress voted
him its thanks and a gold medal. In 1852, Congress passed
a measure offering Scott the pay, rank, and emoluments of a lieutenant
general, the first person to hold that office since George Washington.
That same year, he was the Whig party's unsuccessful candidate for President.
As the secession crisis developed
during the latter part of 1860, Scott pleaded unsuccessfully to President
James Buchanan to reinforce the southern forts and armories against possible
seizure. He brought his headquarters from New York to Washington, D.C.,
so that he could oversee the recruiting and training of the capital's defence.
He personally commanded Abraham Lincoln's bodyguard at the inauguration.
Now seventy-five years old, Scott requested retirement, and in November
1861, he was retired. Five years later, he died at West Point and was buried
in the national cemetery there.
A large and imposing figure,
Scott as a young man stood six feet, five inches tall and weighed 230 pounds.
His career was extraordinarily long, some fifty years, and he was the associate
of every President from Thomas Jefferson to Lincoln. Called "Fuss and Feathers"
because of his punctiliousness in dress and decorum, his reputation for
patriotism and generosity generally won him the trust and loyalty of his
troops.
Back
Courtesy of Tulane
University |