Edward Porter Alexander (May 26, 1835 – April 28, 1910) was an engineer, an officer in the U.S. Army and Confederate States Army, an author, and a railroad executive. He was known to his friends as Porter.
Porter Alexander is best known as the artillery chief for the First (Longstreet's) Corps of the Army of Northern Virginia, which he joined after Bull Run. Alexander's artillery played a prominent part throughout the Eastern theater. He was instrumental in arranging the artillery in defense of Marye's Heights at the Battle of Fredericksburg. And his artillery placements in Hazel Grove at the Battle of Chancellorsville proved decisive. But his most famous engagement was on July 3, 1863, at the Battle of Gettysburg, now as a full colonel at age 26. On that day, Alexander was effectively in control of the artillery for the full army (despite William N. Pendleton's formal role under Lee). He conducted a massive two-hour bombardment, arguably the largest in the war, using over 140 guns against the Union position on Cemetery Ridge. General Longstreet practically put Alexander in charge of launching George Pickett on his famous charge.
Alexander accompanied the First Corps in 1863 to Tennessee to reinforce Gen. Braxton Bragg. He returned with them to Virginia for the remainder of the war, now with the rank of brigadier general. He was wounded in the shoulder by sharpshooter fire during the Siege of Petersburg and convalesced briefly in his native Georgia.
At Appomattox Court House, it was Alexander who proposed to Robert E. Lee that the army disperse into the hills for a guerrilla war, rather than surrendering. Lee rebuked him and Alexander later wrote about regretting his suggestion.
Alexander was a respected author following the war. He wrote many magazine articles and two major books: Fighting for the Confederacy: The Personal Recollections of General Edward Porter Alexander and Military Memoirs of a Confederate: A Critical Narrative. Unlike such Confederate officers as Jubal Early and William Pendleton, he eschewed the bitter Lost Cause theories of why the South was doomed to fail, given the overwhelming superiority of the North. Most historians consider Alexander's memoirs to be one of the most objective and sharpest resources written by a person involved in the Civil War.
Alexander died in Savannah, Georgia, and is buried in Magnolia Cemetery, Augusta, Georgia.
1835 births | 1910 deaths | Confederate Army generals | West Point graduates
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