Fort Gordon: The Augusta, Georgia-area fort is named for a John Brown Gordon (1832-1904), who excelled at just about nothing during the first 29 years of his life. As put by Encyclopedia Britannica, Gordon, "attended but did not graduate from the University of Georgia. He became a lawyer but abandoned his practice to develop coal mines in Georgia’s northwestern tip."
He found his footing during the Civil War, climbing the ranks of the Confederacy from captain to general. Afterward, he was rumored to be a grand dragon of the Ku Klux Klan, a terrorist organization.
Gordon opposed Reconstruction and ran for governor but lost. He served as a U.S. senator 1873–79. Although reelected, he resigned to take a position with a railroad company, "thereby leading the shift of the New South to commercialism and industrialism," according to Encyclopedia Britannica.
Fort A.P. Hill: The fort in Virginia was named for Ambrose Powell Hill. Hill was known for his timely arrival at the Battle of Antietam, which kept the Army of Northern Virginia from being cut off and captured, according to HistoryNet. That aside, for years, writers believed Hill had "some type of psychosomatic disorder. It always seemed that when the action was getting hot or stressful, down went A.P. Hill," according to the Ohio State website. The article adds that Hill suffered from prostatitis -- an inflammation of the prostate. HistoryNet attributes Hill's uneven decision-making to gonorrhea. He was shot and killed during fighting at Petersburg, Virginia.
Fort Hood: Located in Texas, the fort is named for John Bell Hood (1831-79), who "holds the distinction of being one of the most rapidly promoted leaders in the Confederate military forces during the Civil War," according to the National Park Service. He also was one of the primary leaders of shock troops during an assault that nearly destroyed the Union army at the Second Battle of Manassas.
But Hood became involved in a dispute with a superior officer and was nearly court-martialed. His bad luck didn't end there. During Gettysburg, his left arm was wounded, and at the Battle of Chickamauga, he was hit again, requiring the amputation of his right leg. He died in 1879 of yellow fever.
Fort Lee: This Virginia fort is named for Gen. Robert E. Lee (1807-70), the South's most well-known officer. At the beginning of the war, Lee was offered command of federal forces but resigned to fight for the Confederacy. While revered, Lee had his share of mistakes. During the Battle of Gettysburg, he ordered "a frontal assault across a mile of open field against the strong center of the Union line. The stunning Confederate defeat that ensued produced heavier casualties than Lee’s army could afford and abruptly ended its invasion of the North," sums up an article in the Center for Technology and National Security Policy, National Defense University. This came to be known as "Pickett's Charge," even though Lee took responsibility for the disaster.
Nonetheless, Southerners loved Lee during and after his lifetime. When he died, Frederick Douglass (1818-95), former slave, political activist and a prominent African American, wrote, "We can scarcely take up a newspaper . . . that is not filled with nauseating flatteries” of Lee. “...It would seem . . . that the soldier who kills the most men in battle, even in a bad cause, is the greatest Christian, and entitled to the highest place in heaven.”
Fort Pickett: This fort in Blackstone, Virginia, was named for Gen. George Pickett (1825-75), a Confederate who graduated last in his class at West Point and is remembered for the disastrous charge ordered by Lee at Gettysburg.
To recap: Pickett led a division up Cemetery Ridge at the Battle of Gettysburg on July 3, 1863. He lost more than half of his command in this attack, "killed, wounded or captured, including all three of his brigadier generals," according to the National Park Service website. "Although not directly responsible for the disaster, Pickett's name came to be associated with it and his reputation suffered."
But there was more.
Later in the war, Pickett was defeated at the Battle of Five Forks on April 1, 1865, which "precipitated Robert E. Lee's decision to evacuate Richmond," the park service recounts. Toward the end of the war, Pickett was relieved of his command, and after it was all over, he became an insurance salesman.
Fort Polk: The Leesville, Louisiana, fort was named for Leonidas Polk (1806-64), a U.S. bishop of the Protestant Episcopal Church, founder of the University of the South in Sewanee, Tennessee, and lieutenant general in the Confederate army.
Polk, who was related to the 11th president of the United States, James K. Polk, is a complex historical figure. Well before the Civil War, he founded the university "dedicated to training Southern aristocrats in their responsibilities toward blacks, who Polk anticipated would be gradually emancipated," according to Encyclopedia Britannica.
When the war started, however, he accepted a commission as major general in the Confederate army. As an officer, he is known for a catastrophic decision. He marched troops "into Columbus, Kentucky—negating Kentucky’s avowed neutrality and causing the Unionist legislature to invite the U.S. government to drive the invaders away," recounts the History.com website. He was killed in action in 1864. Four years later, with the war over, classes started at the University of the South.
Fort Rucker: The Alabama fort was named for Edmund Rucker (1835-1924). Ambitious and smart, Rucker was self educated, according to an article by Gregory S. Hospodor in The Journal of Southern History. When the Civil War began, Rucker "was in his mid-twenties and a founding partner in an engineering concern,"
He didn't think deeply about secession, however, Hospodor writes. "For him, the Civil War probably represented opportunity. Having made a promising start to his career, Rucker secured an initial officer appointment as an engineer; he later served in both the artillery and the cavalry." But his war experience ended ingloriously when he was wounded and captured while covering the Confederate retreat after the Battle of Nashville in 1864.
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