Historical records matching Maj. General David B. Birney (USA)
Immediate Family
-
daughter
-
son
-
son
-
daughter
-
father
-
mother
-
brother
-
sister
-
stepmother
About Maj. General David B. Birney (USA)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_B._Birney
David Bell Birney (May 29, 1825 – October 18, 1864) was a businessman, lawyer, and a Union General in the American Civil War.
Birney was born in Huntsville, Alabama, the son of an abolitionist from Kentucky, James G. Birney. The Birney family returned to Kentucky in 1833, and James Birney freed his slaves. In 1835, the family moved to Cincinnati, where the father published an anti-slavery newspaper. Following numerous threats from pro-slavery mobs, the family moved again to Michigan, and finally to Philadelphia.
Following his graduation from Phillips Academy, Andover, Massachusetts, David Birney entered business, studied law, and was admitted to the bar. He returned to Philadelphia, practicing law from 1856 until the outbreak of the Civil War.
Birney entered the Union army just after Fort Sumter as lieutenant colonel of the 23rd Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry Regiment, a unit he raised largely at his own expense. Just prior to the war he had been studying military texts in preparation for such a role. He was promoted to colonel on August 31, 1861, and to brigadier general on February 17, 1862, clearly benefiting from political influences, not military merit. He commanded a brigade in Brig. Gen. Philip Kearny's division of the III Corps, which he led through the Peninsula Campaign. At the Battle of Seven Pines he was accused of disobeying an order from his corps commander, Maj. Gen. Samuel P. Heintzelman, allegedly for "halting his command a mile from the enemy." But this was simply a matter of orders misunderstood. Birney was court-martialed, but with strong positive testimony from Kearny, he was acquitted and restored to command.
Birney fought at the Second Battle of Bull Run in support of Maj. Gen. John Pope's Army of Virginia. When Kearny was killed in that battle, Birney took over command of his division. Stationed in Washington, D.C., he missed the Battle of Antietam, but his division returned to the Army of the Potomac to fight at Fredericksburg. There, he once again encountered military discipline problems, this time for allegedly refusing to support Maj. Gen. George G. Meade's division's attack on the left flank of the Union line. However, he was complimented in III Corps commander Maj. Gen. George Stoneman's official report for "the handsome manner in which he handled his division" on that same day and for a second time he escaped punishment. Birney led his division in heavy fighting at Chancellorsville, where they suffered more casualties (1,607) than any other division in the army. As a result of his distinguished service at Chancellorsville, he was promoted to major general on May 20, 1863.
At the Battle of Gettysburg, the III Corps commander was the notorious Maj. Gen. Daniel Sickles. On July 2, 1863, Sickles insubordinately moved his corps from its assigned defensive position on Cemetery Ridge. Birney's new position was from the Devil's Den, to the Wheatfield, to the Peach Orchard, part of a salient directly in the path of the Confederate assault, and it was too long a front for a single division to defend. Assaulted by the divisions of Maj. Gens. John Bell Hood and Lafayette McLaws, Birney's division was demolished. Army commander Meade rushed in reinforcements, but the line could not hold. His division and the entire corps were finished as a fighting force. As Birney watched the few survivors of his division gather about him on Cemetery Ridge, he whispered to one of his officers, "I wish I were already dead." Sickles was grievously wounded by a cannonball and Birney assumed temporary command of the corps, despite having received two minor wounds himself. He retained command until February 1864.
Birney started in the Overland Campaign as a division commander in the II Corps, his III Corps having been reorganized out of existence that spring. After good service in the Wilderness, Spotsylvania Court House (where he was wounded by a shell fragment), and Cold Harbor, on July 23, 1864, Lt. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant gave Birney command of the X Corps in the Army of the James. However, during the Siege of Petersburg, Birney fell ill with malaria (some accounts say dysentery and typhoid fever). He was ordered home to Philadelphia, and died three months later. He is buried there in Woodlands Cemetery.
David Birney was one of the more successful "political generals" of the Civil War. Many of his colleagues resented his swift rise in the ranks and he was not a beloved figure with them or his soldiers. Theodore Lyman of Meade's staff wrote of Birney:
"He was a pale, Puritanical figure, with a demeanor of unmoveable coldness; only he would smile politely when you spoke to him. He was spare in person, with a thin face, light-blue eye, and sandy hair. As a General he took very good care of his Staff and saw they got due promotion. He was a man, too, who looked out for his own interests sharply and knew the mainspring of military advancement. His unpopularity among some persons arose partly from his own promotion, which, however, he deserved, and partly from his cold covert manner".
- Updated from MyHeritage Family Trees via father James Gillespie Birney by SmartCopy: Nov 10 2014, 5:59:47 UTC
Birth: May 29, 1825 Huntsville Madison County Alabama, USA
Death: Oct. 18, 1864 Philadelphia Philadelphia County Pennsylvania, USA
Union Civil War General. Born In Huntsville Alabama, son of abolitionist James G Birney. The Birney family moved to Kentucky in 1833 and freed their slaves, then moved to Cincinnati, Michigan, and finally Philadelphia. Birney graduated from Phillips Academy, where he studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1856. Upon the outbreak of the Civil War, Birney benefited from his political connections and was named Lt. Colonel of the 23rd Regiment Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry, which he raised. Promoted to full Colonel and then to Brigadier General on Feb. 17 1862. He commanded a brigade during the Peninsular Campaign and at the Second Battle of Bull Run took over command of Brig. General Phil Kearney's division when Kearney was killed. Birneys division then fought at Fredericksburg and Chancellorsville where his division suffered more casualties than any other in the Army. Promoted to Major General on May 20 1863 he arrived at Gettysburg with 2 brigades and went into position along Cemetery Ridge, but was ordered to hold the front from the Peach Orchard to Little Round Top with too few men. This front was decimated and with General Sickles being wounded, Birney was put in command as the Peach Orchard was being overrun, soon to be replaced by Maj. General Winfield Hancock. Birney's health began to deteriorate in the summer of 1864 and he died on October 18th of that year. (bio by: Justin M)
Family links:
Parents:
- James Gillespie Birney (1792 - 1857)
- Elizabeth Potts Fitzhugh Birney (1802 - 1869)
Spouse:
*Marie Antoinette Jennison Birney (1831 - 1902)
Children:
*Agatha McDowell Birney (1848 - 1868)*
- David Bell Birney (1862 - 1906)*
Siblings:
*James Gillespie Birney (1817 - 1888)*
- William Birney (1819 - 1907)*
- David Bell Birney (1825 - 1864)
- George Birney (1832 - 1856)**
- Fitzhugh Birney (1842 - 1864)*
- Ann Hughes Birney (1843 - 1846)*
- Calculated relationship
- Half-sibling
Cause of death: Malaria
Burial: Woodlands Cemetery Philadelphia Philadelphia County Pennsylvania, USA Plot: Section CC, Lot 52
Maintained by: Find A Grave Record added: Jan 05, 1999 Find A Grave Memorial# 4289
Maintained by: Find A Grave Record added: Jan 05, 1999
Find A Grave Memorial# 4289
- Updated from Find A Grave Memorial via brother James Gillespie Birney, III by SmartCopy: Dec 17 2014, 3:42:19 UTC
Maj. General David B. Birney (USA)'s Timeline
1825 |
May 28, 1825
|
Huntsville, Madison County, Alabama, United States
|
|
1847 |
1847
|
Michigan
|
|
1849 |
1849
|
Kentucky
|
|
1851 |
1851
|
Pennsylvania
|
|
1853 |
1853
|
Pennsylvania
|
|
1862 |
June 1862
|
Pennsylvania
|
|
1864 |
October 18, 1864
Age 39
|
Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania, United States
|
|
???? | |||
???? |
Woodlands Cemetery (Plot: Section CC Lot 52), Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania, United States
|