1
Let Us Cross
Over
The River
Thomas Jonathan Jackson
An amazing man, and a most amazing time. During1861-65
American's were at war with one another. Some six
million lives were lost. This was certainly the bloodiest times in our History.
There was a teacher, later to become a General for the Southern Confederacy named Thomas
J.Jackson. This is a brief over view of his contribution to the cause he so embraced. Some of his
tactics and exploits are still reviled to this day.
Lieutenant-General
Thomas Jonathan Jackson was one of those rare historical character
who are claimed by all people--a man of his race
almost as much as of the Confederacy. No war has produced a
military celebrity more remarkable, nor one whose fame will be
more enduring. He was born January 21, 1824, in Clarksburg, Va., and his parents, who were of patriotic Revolutionary stock,
dying while he was but a child, he was reared and educate by his kindred in the pure and
simple habits of rural life, taught in good English
schools, and is described as a "diligent, plodding
scholar, having a strong mind, though it was slow
in development." But he was in boyhood" a leader
among his
| fellow-students in the athletic sports of the times,
in which he generally managed his side of the contest so as to
win the victory. By this country training he became a bold and
expert rider and cultivated that spirit of
|
|
daring which
displayed
itself in his Mexican service, and then suddenly again in the
Confederate war. In June, 1842, at the age of eighteen, he was
appointed to a cadetship in the military
academy at West Point, where, commencing with the
disadvantages
of inadequate preparation, he overcame obstacles by such
determination as to rise from year to year in the estimation of the faculty.
He graduated June 30, 1846, at the age of twenty-two
years, receiving brevet rank as second-lieutenant at the beginning
of the Mexican war, and was ordered to report for duty with the
First Regular artillery, with which he shared in the many brilliant
battles which General Scott fought from Vera Cruz to the City of
Mexico. He was often commended for his soldierly conduct and soon
received
|
successive promotions for gallantry at Contreras and Churubusco.
Captain Magruder, afterwards a Confederate general, thus mentioned
him in orders: "If devotion, industry, talent, and gallantry
are the highest qualities of a soldier, then is he entitled to the
distinction which their possession confers."Jackson was one of
the volunteers in the storming of Chapultepec, and for his daring
there was brevetted major, |
|
which was his rank at the close of the
Mexican war.
His religious
character, which history has and will inseparably connect with his
military life, appears to have begun forming in the City of Mexico,
where his attention was directed to the subject of the variety of
beliefs on religious questions. His amiable and affectionate
biographer (Mrs. Jackson) mentions that Colonel Francis Taylor, the
commander of the First artillery, under whom Jackson was serving,
was the first man to speak to him on the subject of personal
religion. Jackson had not at any time of his life yielded to the
vices, and was in all habits strictly moral, but had given no
particular attention to the duties enjoined by the church. Convinced
now that this neglect was wrong, he began to study the Bible and
pursued his inquiries until he
|
finally united (1851) with the
Presbyterian church. His remarkable devoutness of habit and
unwavering confidence in the truth of his faith contributed, it is
conceded, very greatly to the full development of his singular
character, as well as to his marvelous success. In1848 Jackson's
command was stationed at Fort Hamilton for two years, then at Fort
Meade, in Florida, and from that station he was elected to a chair
in the Virginia military institute at Lexington in 1851, which he
accepted, and resigning his commission, made Lexington his home ten
years, and until he began his remarkable' career in the Confederate
war. |
 |
Two years later, 1853, he married Miss Eleanor, daughter of
Rev. Dr. Junkin, president of Washington college, but she lived
scarcely more than a year. Three years after, July 16, 1857, his
second marriage occurred, with Miss Mary Anna, daughter of Rev. Dr.
H. R- Morrison, of North Carolina, a distinguished educator, whose
other daughters married men who attained eminence in civil and
military life, among them being. General D H. Hill, General
Rufus Barringer, and Chief Justice A. C. Avery.
The
only special incident occurring amidst the educational and domestic
life of Major Jackson, which flowed on serenely from this hour, was
the summons of the cadets of the Institute by Governor Letcher, to
proceed to Harper's Ferry on the occasion of the raid of John Brown
in 1859. During the presidential campaign of 1860 Major Jackson
visited New England and there heard enough to arouse his fears for
the safety of the Union. At the election of that year he cast his
vote for Breckinridge on the principle that he was a State rights
man, and after Lincoln's election he favored the policy of
contending in the Union rather than out of it, for the recovery of
the ground that had thus been lost. The course of coercion, however,
alarmed him, and the failure of the Peace congress persuaded him
that if the United States persisted in their course war would
certainly result. His State saw as he did, and on the passage of its
ordinance of secession, the military cadets under the command of
Major Jackson were ordered to the field by the governor of Virginia.
The order was promptly obeyed April 21,1861, from which date his
Confederate military life began.
| Jackson's valuable service was
given to Virginia in the occupation of Harper's Ferry and several
subsequent small affairs, but his fame became general from the
battle of First Manassas. It was at one of the crises of that first
trial battle between the Federal and Confederate line
he called out, "We will give them the bayonet," and a few
minutes later the steadiness with which the brigade received the
shock of battle caused the Confederate General Bee to exclaim:
"There stands Jackson like a stone wall." troops that he was
given the war name of "Stonewall," by which he |
|
will be
always designated. The true story will be often repeated that on
being notified of the Federal advance to break the Confederate
He was commissioned
brigadier-general June 17, 1861, and was promoted to
major-general October 7,1861, with
the wise assignment to command of the Valley district, which
he assumed in November of that year.
With a small force he began even in winter a series of bold
operations in the great Virginia valley, and
opened the spring campaign of 1862, on plans concerted between
General Joseph E.Johnston and
himself, by attacking the enemy at Kernstown, March 23rd,
where he sustained his only repulse; but
even in the movement which resulted in a temporary defeat he
caused the recall of a considerable
Federal force designed to strengthen McClellan in the advance
against Richmond. The next
important battle was fought at McDowell, in which Jackson won
a decided victory over Fremont. Then moving
with celerity and sagacity he drove Banks at Front Royal,
struck him again at Newtown and at
length utterly routed him. After this, turning about on
Shields, he overthrew his command also, and thus, in one month's campaign, broke up the Federal forces which had
been sent to "crush him." In these
rapidly executed operations he had successfully fought five
battles against three distinct armies, requiring
four hundred miles, marching to compass the fields.
|
This Valley
swelling heart he had "heard some of the first
soldiers and military students of England
declare that within the past two hundred years the English
speaking race has produced but five soldiers of
the first rank--Marlborough, Washington, Wellington, Lee and
Stonewall Jackson, and that this
campaign in the valley was superior to either of those made by
Napoleon in Italy." One British officer, who
teaches strategy in a great European college, told Surgeon
McGuire that he used this campaign as
a model of strategy and tactics, dwelling upon it for several
months in his lectures; that it was taught
in the schools of Germany, and |
 |
that Von Moltke, the great
strategist, declared it was without a
rival in the world's history.
After this brilliant
service for the Confederacy Jackson joined Lee at Richmond in
time to strike McClellan's
flank at the battle of Cold Harbor, and to contribute to the
Federal defeat in the Seven Days'
battles around Richmond. In the campaign against Pope,
undertaken by Lee after he had defeated
McClellan, Jackson was sent on a movement suited to his
genius, capturing Manassas Junction,
and foiling Pope until the main battle of Second Manassas,
August 30, 1862, under Lee, despoiled
that Federal general of all his former honors. The Maryland
campaign immediately followed, in which
Jackson led in the capture of Harper's Ferry September 15th,
taking 11,500 prisoners, and an immense
amount of arms and stores, just preceding the battle of
Sharpsburg, in which he also fought with notable
efficiency at a critical juncture. The promotion lieutenant-
general was now accorded him, October 10,
1862. At the battle of Fredericksburg, December 13, 1862,
Lieutenant-General Jackson held the
Confederate right against all Federal assaults. The Federal
disaster in this battle resulted in the
resignation of Burnside and the reorganization of the army
under General Hooker in 1863.

Little Sorrel (Jackson's horse)
After the most complete
preparations Hooker advanced against Lee at Chancellorsville,
who countervailed all the Federal general's plans by sending
Jackson to find and crush his right flank, which
movement was
|
in the process of brilliant accomplishment when
Jackson, who had passed his own lines to make a personal
inspection of the situation, was fired upon and fatally
wounded by a line of Confederates
who unhappily mistook him and his escort for the enemy. The
glory of the achievement which Lee
and Jackson planned, fell upon General Stuart next day, who,
succeeding Jackson in command,
ordered that charge which became so ruinous to Hooker, with
the thrilling
"Remember Jackson."
|
 |
General Jackson
lived a few days and died lamented more than any soldier who
had fallen. Lee said: "I have lost my
right arm." The army felt that his place could not be
easily supplied. The South was weighted
with grief. After the war, when the North dispassionately
studied the man they ceased to wonder at
the admiration in which he was held by the world. He was
buried at Lexington, Va., where a monument
erected by affection marks his grave. "For centuries men
will come to Lexington as a Mecca, and
to this grave as a shrine, and wonderingly talk of this man
and his mighty deeds. Time will only add to his great fame-his name will be honored and
revered forever. Jackson believed "It's a man's entire duty to pray and fight."
This might have been the best philosophy during this tumultuous period for a
General to
adhere to. Thus his final word
"Let us cross over the river and
rest
beneath
the shade of the tree"
Bibliography
The standard and highly
recommended biography and suggested readings Robertson, James I. Stonewall
Jackson--the man, the soldier, the legend. New York :
Macmillan Library Reference USA, 1997.
This book contains an excellent and
comprehensive bibliography of primary and secondary sources.
Selected resources published since
1950
Alexander, Bevin. Lost victories :
the military genius of Stonewall Jackson. New York : Holt,
1992.
Casdorph, Paul D. Lee and Jackson :
Confederate chieftains. New York : Paragon House, 1992.
Chambers, Lenoir, 1891-1970.
Stonewall Jackson. New York : Morrow, c1959.
Clark, Champ. Decoying the yanks :
Jackson's valley campaign. Alexandria, Va. : Time-Life Books,
c1984.
J.J. Oakley
Back
To Top
Home
¶
Back
¶ Next