John White Geary (December 30, 1819 – February 8, 1873) was a lawyer, politician (mayor of San Francisco, governor of the Kansas Territory, and governor of Pennsylvania), and Union general in the American Civil War.
Geary was active in the state militia as a teenager and when the Mexican War started, he enlisted in a Pennsylvania volunteer regiment. He led the regiment heroically at Chapultepec, and was wounded five times in the process. (He an excellent target for enemy fire: a huge man for that era, he stood six feet six inches tall, 260 pounds (118 kg) and solidly built. He was wounded at least ten times in his military career.) His exploits earned him the rank of colonel and he returned home a war hero.
Moving west, Geary was appointed postmaster of San Francisco by President Polk, and in 1850, became the city's first mayor. (He was first the Alcalde under Spanish rule and then the American mayor of the city.) He had to return to Pennsylvania after a year because of his wife's failing health. After her death, President Franklin Pierce wanted to appoint him governor of the Utah Territory, but Geary demurred. In 1856, he became governor of the Kansas Territory, soon to be known as "Bleeding Kansas". Geary was unable to stop the bloodshed there, and stayed in Kansas less than a year, again returning to Pennsylvania to farm. Prior to serving in Kansas, Geary was a Democrat, but afterwards he became an enthusiastic Republican and active abolitionist.
Geary's division was heavily engaged at Chancellorsville, where he was knocked unconscious as a cannonball shot past his head on May 3, 1863. (Some accounts state that he was hit in the chest with a cannonball, which seems unlikely.)
At the Battle of Gettysburg, Slocum's corps arrived after the first day's (July 1, 1863) fighting subsided and took up a defensive position on Culp's Hill, the extreme right wing of the Union line. On the second day, heavy fighting on the Union left demanded reinforcements and Geary was ordered to leave a single brigade, under George S. Greene, on Culp's Hill and follow another division, which was just departing. Geary lost track of the division he was supposed to follow south on the Baltimore Pike and inexplicably marched completely off the battlefield, eventually reaching Rock Creek. His two brigades finally returned to Culp's Hill by 9:00 p.m. that night, arriving in the midst of a fierce fire fight between a Confederate division and Greene's lone brigade. This embarrassing incident might have damaged his reputation except for two factors: the part of the battle he was supposed to march to join had ended, so he wasn't really needed; and, because of a dispute between army commander George G. Meade and Slocum over the filing of their official reports, little public notice ensued.
The XII Corps was transferred west to join the besieged Union army at Chattanooga. Geary's son Edward died in his arms at the Battle of Wauhatchie, enraging him sufficiently to prevail in a battle in which his division was greatly outnumbered. He distinguished himself in command during the Battle of Lookout Mountain, the entire Atlanta Campaign, Sherman's March to the Sea, and the Carolinas Campaign. He oversaw the surrender of Savannah, Georgia, and briefly served as the city's military governor, where he was brevetted to major general.
On February 8, 1873, less than three weeks after leaving the governor's post, Geary was fatally stricken with a heart attack while preparing breakfast for his infant son in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. He was buried there with state honors in Mount Kalma Cemetery.
1819 births | 1873 deaths | Governors of Pennsylvania | History of San Francisco | Mayors of San Francisco | Union Army generals | United States Army generals | People of the Mexican-American War | Kansas politicians
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"John W. Geary".
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