James Montgomery Bell

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Brigadier General James Montgomery Bell

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Williamsburg, Blair County, Pennsylvania, United States
Death: September 17, 1919 (81)
1920 Hermosa Ave, Hermosa Beach, Los Angeles County, California, United States (Cerebral hemorrhage)
Place of Burial: San Francisco, San Francisco County, California, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of William Bell and Elizabeth Bell
Husband of Emily Mary Bell
Father of Private; Private; Private; Private and Private

Occupation: United States Army officer
Managed by: Klarenz Kristoffer Magdaluyo Qui...
Last Updated:
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Immediate Family

About James Montgomery Bell

A native of Williamsburg, Pennsylvania, Bell graduated from Wittenberg College in 1862 and enlisted in the Union Army. Commissioned as a first lieutenant in the 86th Ohio Infantry Regiment, he served with this regiment until June 1863, when he was promoted to captain as commander of the Independent Troop, Pennsylvania Cavalry, which he led until August, when he assumed command of a troop in the 7th Pennsylvania Cavalry Regiment, with which he served until the end of the war. Engagements in which Bell took part included the Battle of the Wilderness, the Second Battle of Ream's Station. He received brevet promotions for heroism at the Wilderness, and major for Ream's Station.

In June 1866, Bell accepted a regular army commission as a second lieutenant in the 7th Cavalry Regiment. He served on the frontier during the American Indian Wars, and was promoted to first lieutenant (1867) and captain (1876). He took part in the 1868 Battle of the Washita River and the 1877 Battle of Canyon Creek. Following Canyon Creek, Bell received brevet promotion to lieutenant colonel. Bell served as an escort for the Northern Pacific Railway construction crew during the summers of 1880, 1881, and 1882, and was promoted to major in 1896.

Bell served in the Philippines during the Spanish–American War and Philippine–American War, receiving promotion to lieutenant colonel of the 13th Cavalry Regiment in 1898 and promotion to colonel as commander of the 8th Infantry Regiment in 1899. In 1900, Bell was promoted to brigadier general of United States Volunteers. He commanded an ad hoc brigade, Bell's Expeditionary Brigade, during operations in the Camarines Provinces, followed by command of the Third Military District of Southern Luzon. He was military governor of the Third Military District from April 1900 to March 1901.

Bell left the army upon reaching the mandatory retirement age of 64 in October 1901, and resided in New London, Connecticut and Hermosa Beach, California. He died in Hermosa Beach on September 17, 1919. Bell was buried at San Francisco National Cemetery.


https://www.nps.gov/waba/learn/historyculture/james-bell.htm

James Montgomery Bell was born on October 1, 1837, at Williamsburg, Pennsylvania, and earned a master's degree from Wittenburg College in 1862. He was mustered into the 13th Pennsylvania Cavalry as a captain in October 1863 and participated in sixteen major engagements, including the Wilderness, Spotsylvania, North Anna, White Oak Road, and Coggins Point, where he was wounded.

He was appointed a second lieutenant in the 7th U.S. Cavalry on July 7th, 1866, and was promoted to first lieutenant in April 1867. Bell served as quartermaster from 1867 to 1869, and became a friend and frequent social guest of Lieutenant Colonel George A. and Libby Custer.

During the November 1868 Washita battle, he was in charge of the advance supply train. After Captain Frederick Benteen's departure from the train to join Major Joel H. Elliott, the wagons and their tiny escort had advanced up the trail about a half mile. At the sound of the shooting, Bell again moved forward but was delayed crossing the Washita River approximately one mile above the village. Then, following on Custer's trail, he ascended the steep grade and saw the on-going fight below. Finally, the train penetrated a loose cordon of warriors arriving from the downstream camps. These men disrupted the effort to claim the soldiers' greatcoats and other equipment left behind during the initial advance, and the Cheyenne seized the material while the train, drawn by galloping mules, raced down the crusted slopes, forded the stream some distance west of the fighting and entered the village. The wheels of one of the wagons was in flames because of friction on the tarred axle, and upon reaching the lodges the troopers overturned the wagon to save the ammunition, using snow to extinguish the fire. After Bell's arrival shortly before noon, ammunition was distributed to the troops.

Bell married Emiline "Emily" Mary Hone on March 12, 1872, at the Trinity Church in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The couple did not have children. Major Marcus Reno stood a court-martial in May 1877, in part for making improper advances to Emily Bell-a charge Reno denied, claiming that she had been the aggressor. Nevertheless, Reno was found guilty.

Bell did not participate in the Yellowstone or Black Hills expeditions, as he was on detached service with the Northern Boundary Survey. He missed the Little Bighorn campaign while on leave of absence and received his captaincy as a result of the death of Captain George Yates. He served in the West for the next twenty years, receiving a brevet to lieutenant colonel for the 1877 battle of Canyon Creek against the Nez Perce.

Bell served as an escort for the Northern Pacific Railroad construction crew during the summers of 1880-82. He was appointed major in April 1896, and in 1898, he commanded a regiment in the Cuban campaign of the Spanish-American War. In 1899, as a brigadier general of volunteers, he led a brigade in the Philippines. He retired as a Regular Army brigadier general in 1901 to Pasadena, California.

In 1918, Representative James McClintic of Oklahoma introduced a resolution in Congress to grant Bell the Medal of Honor for his valorous deed at the Battle of the Washita. The Bill was in discussion at the time of his death; it died in committee. James Montgomery Bell died in Hermossa Beach, California on September 17, 1919. Bell was buried in the San Francisco National Cemetery.

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James Montgomery Bell's Timeline

1837
October 1, 1837
Williamsburg, Blair County, Pennsylvania, United States
November 20, 1837
Zion's Evangelical Lutheran Church, Williamsburg, Blair County, PA, United States
1919
September 17, 1919
Age 81
1920 Hermosa Ave, Hermosa Beach, Los Angeles County, California, United States
October 1, 1919
Age 81
San Francisco National Cemetery, San Francisco, San Francisco County, California, United States