Everything about Phillip Sheridan totally explained
Philip Henry Sheridan (
March 6,
1831 –
August 5,
1888) was a career
U.S. Army officer and a
Union general in the
American Civil War. His career was noted for his rapid rise to
major general and his close association with
Lt. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant, who transferred Sheridan from command of an infantry division in the
Western Theater to lead the Cavalry Corps of the
Army of the Potomac in the East. In 1864, he defeated
Confederate forces in the
Shenandoah Valley and his destruction of the economic infrastructure of the Valley, called "The Burning" by residents, was one of the first uses of
scorched earth tactics in the war. In 1865, his cavalry pursued Gen.
Robert E. Lee and was instrumental in forcing his surrender at
Appomattox.
Sheridan prosecuted the latter years of the
Indian Wars of the
Great Plains, tainting his reputation with some historians, who accuse him of racism and genocide. Both as a soldier and private citizen, he was instrumental in the development and protection of
Yellowstone National Park.
Early life
Sheridan claimed he was born in
Albany, New York, the third child of six by John and Mary Meenagh Sheridan, immigrants from the parish of
Killinkere,
County Cavan,
Ireland. He grew up in
Somerset, Ohio. Fully grown, he reached only 5 feet 5 inches (1.65 m) tall, a stature that led to the nickname, "Little Phil."
Abraham Lincoln described his appearance in a famous anecdote: "A brown, chunky little chap, with a long body, short legs, not enough neck to hang him, and such long arms that if his ankles itch he can scratch them without stooping."
Sheridan worked as a boy in town general stores, and eventually as head clerk and bookkeeper for a dry goods store. In 1848, he obtained an appointment to the
United States Military Academy from one of his customers,
Congressman Thomas Ritchey; Ritchey's first candidate for the appointment was disqualified by failing an examination of mathematics skill and a "poor attitude." In his third year at West Point, Sheridan was suspended for a year for fighting with a classmate,
William R. Terrill. The previous day, Sheridan had threatened to run him through with a bayonet in reaction to a perceived insult on the parade ground. He graduated in 1853, 34th in his class of 52 cadets.
Sheridan was commissioned as a
brevet second lieutenant and was assigned to the
1st U.S. Infantry regiment at
Fort Duncan,
Texas, then to the
4th U.S. Infantry at Fort Reading,
California. Most of his service with the 4th U.S. was in the
Pacific Northwest, starting with a topographical survey mission to the
Willamette Valley in 1855, during which he became involved with the
Yakima War and
Rogue River Wars, gaining experience in leading small combat teams, being wounded (a bullet grazed his nose on
March 28,
1857, at Middle Cascade,
Oregon Territory), He was promoted to
first lieutenant in March 1861, just before the Civil War, and to
captain in May, immediately after
Fort Sumter.
In December, Sheridan was appointed chief commissary officer of the Army of Southwest Missouri, but convinced the department commander, Halleck, to give him the position of
quartermaster general as well. In January 1862, he reported for duty to Maj. Gen.
Samuel Curtis and served under him at the
Battle of Pea Ridge. Sheridan soon discovered that officers were engaged in profiteering. They stole horses from civilians and demanded payment from Sheridan. He refused to pay for the stolen property and confiscated the horses for the use of Curtis's army. When Curtis ordered him to pay the officers, Sheridan brusquely retorted, "No authority can compel me to jayhawk or steal." Curtis had Sheridan arrested for insubordination but Halleck's influence appears to have ended any formal proceedings. Sheridan performed aptly in his role under Curtis and, now returned to Halleck's headquarters, he accompanied the army on the
Siege of Corinth and served as an assistant to the department's topographical engineer, but also made the acquaintance of
Brig. Gen. William T. Sherman, who offered him the
colonelcy of an Ohio infantry regiment. This appointment fell through, but Sheridan was subsequently aided by friends (including future
Secretary of War Russell A. Alger), who petitioned Michigan Governor
Austin Blair on his behalf. Sheridan was appointed colonel of the 2nd Michigan Cavalry on
May 27,
1862, despite having no experience in the mounted arm.
A month later, Sheridan commanded his first forces in combat, leading a small brigade that included his regiment. At the
Battle of Booneville,
Mississippi,
July 1,
1862, he held back several regiments of Brig. Gen.
James R. Chalmers's Confederate cavalry, deflected a large flanking attack with a noisy diversion, and reported critical intelligence about enemy dispositions. His actions so impressed the division commanders, including Brig. Gen.
William S. Rosecrans, that they recommended Sheridan's promotion to
brigadier general. They wrote to Halleck, "Brigadiers scarce; good ones scarce. ... The undersigned respectfully beg that you'll obtain the promotion of Sheridan. He is worth his weight in gold." The promotion was approved in September, but dated effective
July 1 as a reward for his actions at Booneville. It was just after Booneville that one of his fellow officers gave him the horse that he named Rienzi (after the skirmish of
Rienzi, Mississippi), which he'd ride throughout the war.
Sheridan was assigned to command the 11th Division, III Corps, in Maj. Gen.
Don Carlos Buell's
Army of the Ohio. On
October 8,
1862, Sheridan led his division in the
Battle of Perryville. Under orders from Buell and his corps commander, Maj. Gen.
Charles Gilbert, Sheridan sent Col.
Daniel McCook's brigade to secure a water supply for the army. McCook drove off the Confederates and secured water for the parched Union troops at Doctor's Creek. Gilbert ordered McCook not to advance any further and then rode to consult with Buell. Along the way, Gilbert ordered his cavalry to attack the Confederates in Dan McCook's front. Sheridan heard the gunfire and came to the front with another brigade. Although the cavalry failed to secure the heights in front of McCook, Sheridan's reinforcements drove off the Southerners. Gilbert returned and ordered Sheridan to return to McCook's original position. Sheridan's aggressiveness convinced the opposing Confederates under Maj. Gen.
Leonidas Polk, that he should remain on the defensive. His troops repulsed Confederate attacks later that day, but didn't participate in the heaviest fighting of the day, which occurred on the Union left.
On
December 31,
1862, the first day of the
Battle of Stones River, Sheridan anticipated a Confederate assault and positioned his division in preparation for it. His division held back the Confederate onslaught on his front until their ammunition ran out and they were forced to withdraw. This action was instrumental in giving the Union army time to rally at a strong defensive position. For his actions, he was promoted to major general on
April 10,
1863 (with date of rank
December 31,
1862). In six months, he'd risen from captain to major general.
The Army of the Cumberland recovered from the shock of Stones River and prepared for its summer offensive against Confederate General
Braxton Bragg. Sheridan's was the lead division advancing against Bragg in Rosecrans's brilliant
Tullahoma Campaign. On the second day of the
Battle of Chickamauga,
September 20,
1863, Rosecrans was shifting Sheridan's division behind the Union battle line when Bragg launched an attack into a gap in the Confederate line. Sheridan's division made a gallant stand on Lytle Hill against an attack by the Confederate corps of
Lt. Gen. James Longstreet, but was swamped by retreating Union soldiers. The Confederates drove Sheridan's division from the field in confusion. He gathered as many men as he could and withdrew toward Chattanooga, rallying troops along the way. Learning of Maj. Gen.
George H. Thomas's
XIV Corps stand on Snodgrass Ridge, Sheridan ordered his division back to the fighting, but they took a circuitous route and didn't participate in the fighting as some histories claim. His return to the battlefield ensured that he didn't suffer the fate of Rosecrans who rode off to Chattanooga leaving the army to its fate, and was soon relieved of command.
During the
Battle of Chattanooga, at Missionary Ridge on
November 25,
1863, Sheridan's division and others in George Thomas's army broke through the Confederate lines in a wild charge that exceeded the orders and expectations of Thomas and Ulysses S. Grant. Just before his men stepped off, Sheridan told them, "Remember Chickamauga," and many shouted its name as they advanced as ordered to a line of rifle pits in their front. Faced with enemy fire from above, however, they continued up the ridge. Sheridan spotted a group of Confederate officers outlined against the crest of the ridge and shouted, "Here's at you!" An exploding shell sprayed him with dirt and he responded, "That's damn ungenerous! I'll take those guns for that!" The Union charge broke through the Confederate lines on the ridge and Bragg's army fell into retreat. Sheridan impulsively ordered his men to pursue Bragg to the Confederate supply depot at Chickamauga Station, but called them back when he realized that his was the only command so far forward. General Grant reported after the battle, "To Sheridan's prompt movement, the Army of the Cumberland and the nation are indebted for the bulk of the capture of prisoners, artillery, and small arms that day. Except for his prompt pursuit, so much in this way wouldn't have been accomplished."
Overland Campaign
Lt. Gen.
Ulysses S. Grant, newly promoted to be general-in-chief of all the Union armies, summoned Sheridan to the
Eastern Theater to command the Cavalry Corps of the
Army of the Potomac. Unbeknownst to Sheridan, he was actually Grant's second choice, after Maj. Gen.
William B. Franklin, but Grant agreed to a suggestion about Sheridan from Chief of Staff Henry W. Halleck. After the war, and in his memoirs, Grant claimed that Sheridan was the very man he wanted for the job. Sheridan arrived at the headquarters of the Army of the Potomac on
April 5,
1864, less than a month before the start of Grant's massive
Overland Campaign against
Robert E. Lee.
In the early battles of the campaign, Sheridan's cavalry was relegated by army commander Maj. Gen.
George G. Meade to its traditional role—screening, reconnaissance, and guarding trains and rear areas—much to Sheridan's frustration. In the
Battle of the Wilderness (
May 5 and
May 6,
1864), the dense forested terrain prevented any significant cavalry role. As the army swung around the Confederate right flank in the direction of
Spotsylvania Court House, Sheridan's troopers failed to clear the road from the Wilderness, losing engagements along the Plank Road on
May 5 and Todd's Tavern on
May 6 through
May 8, allowing the Confederates to seize the critical crossroads before the Union infantry could arrive.
When Meade reprimanded Sheridan for not performing his duties of screening and reconnaissance as ordered, Sheridan went directly to Meade's superior, General Grant, recommending that his corps be assigned to strategic raiding missions. Grant agreed, and from
May 9 through
May 24, sent him on a raid toward
Richmond, directly challenging the Confederate cavalry. The raid was less successful than hoped; although his soldiers managed to kill Confederate cavalry commander Maj. Gen.
J.E.B. Stuart at
Yellow Tavern on
May 11, the raid never seriously threatened Richmond and it left Grant without cavalry intelligence for Spotsylvania and
North Anna. Historian Gordon C. Rhea wrote, "By taking his cavalry from Spotsylvania Court House, Sheridan severely handicapped Grant in his battles against Lee. The Union Army was deprived of his eyes and ears during a critical juncture in the campaign. And Sheridan's decision to advance boldly to the Richmond defenses smacked of unnecessary showboating that jeopardized his command."
Rejoining the Army of the Potomac, Sheridan's cavalry fought to a technical victory at
Haw's Shop (
May 28), but one with heavy casualties and one that allowed the Confederate cavalry to obtain valuable intelligence about Union dispositions. It seized the critical crossroads that triggered the
Battle of Cold Harbor (
June 1 to
June 12) and withstood a number of assaults until reinforced. Sheridan then proceeded on a raid to the northwest to break the
Virginia Central Railroad and to link up with the
Shenandoah Valley army of Maj. Gen.
David Hunter. He was intercepted by the Confederate cavalry under Maj. Gen.
Wade Hampton and defeated at the
Battle of Trevilian Station, failing in all of the objectives of the raid.
History draws decidedly mixed opinions on the success of Sheridan in the Overland Campaign, in no small part because the very clear Union victory at
Yellow Tavern, highlighted by the death of Jeb Stuart, tends to overshadow other actions and battles. In Sheridan's report of the Cavalry Corps' actions in the campaign, discussing the strategy of cavalry fighting cavalry, he wrote, "The result was constant success and the almost total annihilation of the rebel cavalry. We marched when and where we pleased; we were always the attacking party, and always successful." A contrary view has been published by historian Eric J. Wittenberg, who notes that of four major strategic raids (Richmond, Trevilian, Wilson-Kautz, and First Deep Bottom) and thirteen major cavalry engagements of the campaign, only Yellow Tavern can be considered a Union victory, with Haw's Shop, Trevilian Station, Meadow Bridge, Samaria Church, and the Wilson-Kautz raid defeats in which some of Sheridan's forces barely avoided destruction.
Army of the Shenandoah
Throughout the war, the Confederacy sent armies out of Virginia through the
Shenandoah Valley to invade
Maryland and
Pennsylvania and threaten
Washington, D.C. Lt. Gen.
Jubal A. Early, following the same pattern in the
Valley Campaigns of 1864, and hoping to distract Grant from the
Siege of Petersburg, attacked Union forces near Washington and raided several towns in Pennsylvania. Grant, reacting to the political commotion caused by the invasion, organized the
Middle Military Division, whose field troops were known as the
Army of the Shenandoah. He considered various candidates for command, including George Meade, William B. Franklin, and
David Hunter, with the latter two intended for the military division while Sheridan would command the army. All of these choices were rejected by either Grant or the War Department and, over the objection of
Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton, who believed him to be too young for such a high post, Sheridan took command in both roles at
Harpers Ferry on
August 7,
1864. His mission wasn't only to defeat Early's army and to close off the Northern invasion route, but to deny the Shenandoah Valley as a productive agricultural region to the Confederacy. Grant told Sheridan, "The people should be informed that so long as an army can subsist among them recurrences of these raids must be expected, and we're determined to stop them at all hazards. ... Give the enemy no rest ... Do all the damage to railroads and crops you can. Carry off stock of all descriptions, and negroes, so as to prevent further planting. If the war is to last another year, we want the Shenandoah Valley to remain a barren waste."
Sheridan got off to a slow start, needing time to organize and to react to reinforcements reaching Early; Grant ordered him not to launch an offensive "with the advantage against you." And yet Grant expressed frustration with Sheridan's lack of progress. The armies remained unengaged for over a month, causing political consternation in the North as the
1864 election drew near. The two generals conferred on
September 16 at
Charles Town and agreed that Sheridan would begin his attacks within four days.
On
September 19, Sheridan beat Early's much smaller army at
Third Winchester and followed up on
September 22 with a victory at
Fisher's Hill. As Early attempted to regroup, Sheridan began the punitive operations of his mission, sending his cavalry as far south as
Waynesboro to seize or destroy livestock and provisions, and to burn barns, mills, factories, and railroads. Sheridan's men did their work relentlessly and thoroughly, rendering over 400 mi.² uninhabitable. The destruction presaged the
scorched earth tactics of
Sherman's March to the Sea through
Georgia—deny an army a base from which to operate and bring the effects of war home to the population supporting it. The residents referred to this widespread destruction as "The Burning." The Confederates were not idle during this period and Sheridan's men were plagued by
guerrilla raids by partisan ranger Col.
John S. Mosby.
Although Sheridan assumed that Jubal Early was effectively out of action and he considered withdrawing his army to rejoin Grant at Petersburg, Early received reinforcements and, on
October 19 at
Cedar Creek, launched a well-executed surprise attack while Sheridan was absent from his army, ten miles away at
Winchester. Hearing the distant sounds of
artillery, he rode aggressively to his command. He reached the battlefield about 10:30 a.m. and began to rally his men. Fortunately for Sheridan, Early's men were too occupied to take notice; they were hungry and exhausted and fell out to pillage the Union camps. Sheridan's actions are generally credited with saving the day (although Maj. Gen.
Horatio G. Wright, commanding Sheridan's
VI Corps, had already rallied his men and stopped their retreat). Early had been dealt his most significant defeat, rendering his army almost incapable of future offensive action. Sheridan received a personal letter of thanks from Abraham Lincoln and a promotion to major general in the
regular army as of
November 8,
1864, making him the fourth ranking general in the Army, after Grant, Sherman, and Meade. A famous poem,
Sheridan's Ride, was written by
Thomas Buchanan Read to commemorate the general's return to the battle. Sheridan reveled in the fame that Read's poem brought him, renaming his horse Rienzi to "Winchester," based on the poem's refrain, "Winchester, twenty miles away." The poem was widely used in
Republican campaign efforts and some have credited Abraham Lincoln's margin of victory to it.
Sheridan spent the next several months occupied with light skirmishing and fighting guerrillas. Although Grant continued his exhortations for Sheridan to move south and break the Virginia Central Railroad supplying Petersburg, Sheridan resisted. Wright's VI Corps returned to join Grant in November. Sheridan's remaining men, primarily cavalry and artillery, finally moved out of their winter quarters on
February 27,
1865, and headed east. The orders from Gen. Grant were largely discretionary: they were to destroy the Virginia Central Railroad and the
James River Canal, capture
Lynchburg if practicable, then either join William T. Sherman in North Carolina or return to Winchester.
Appomattox Campaign
Sheridan interpreted Grant's orders liberally and instead of heading to North Carolina in March 1865, he moved to rejoin the Army of the Potomac at Petersburg. He wrote in his memoirs, "Feeling that the war was nearing its end, I desired my cavalry to be in at the death." His finest service of the Civil War was demonstrated during his relentless pursuit of
Robert E. Lee's Army, effectively managing the most crucial aspects of the
Appomattox Campaign for Grant.
On the way to Petersburg, at the
Battle of Waynesboro,
March 2, he trapped the remainder of Early's army and 1,500 soldiers surrendered. On
April 1, he cut off Gen. Lee's lines of support at
Five Forks, forcing Lee to evacuate Petersburg. During this battle he ruined the military career of Maj. Gen.
Gouverneur K. Warren by removing him from command of the
V Corps under circumstances that a court of inquiry later determined were unjustified.
Sheridan's aggressive and well-executed performance at the
Battle of Sayler's Creek on
April 6 effectively sealed the fate of Lee's army, capturing over 20% of his remaining men. President Lincoln sent Grant a telegram on
April 7: "Gen. Sheridan says 'If the thing is pressed I think that Lee will surrender.' Let the thing be pressed." At
Appomattox Court House,
April 9,
1865, Sheridan blocked Lee's escape, forcing the surrender of the
Army of Northern Virginia later that day. Grant summed up Little Phil's performance in these final days: "I believe General Sheridan has no superior as a general, either living or dead, and perhaps not an equal."
Reconstruction
After the surrender of Lee, and of Gen.
Joseph E. Johnston in North Carolina, the only significant Confederate field force remaining was in Texas under Gen.
Edmund Kirby Smith. Grant appointed Sheridan commander of the Military District of the Southwest on
May 17,
1865, Sheridan later admitted in his memoirs that he'd supplied arms to Juárez's forces: "... supplied with arms and ammunition, which we left at convenient places on our side of the river to fall into their hands."
On
July 30,
1866, while Sheridan was in Texas, a white mob broke up the state constitutional convention in
New Orleans. Thirty-four blacks were killed. Shortly after Sheridan returned, he wired Grant, "The more information I obtain of the affair of the 30th in this city the more revolting it becomes. It was no riot; it was an absolute massacre." In March 1867, with
Reconstruction barely started, Sheridan was appointed military governor of the
Fifth Military District (Texas and Louisiana). He severely limited voter registration for former Confederates and then required that only registered voters (including black men) be eligible to serve on juries.
An inquiry into the deadly riot of 1866 implicated numerous local officials and Sheridan dismissed the mayor of New Orleans, the Louisiana attorney general, and a district judge. He later removed Louisiana Governor
James M. Wells, accusing him of being "a political trickster and a dishonest man." He also dismissed Texas Governor
James W. Throckmorton, a former Confederate, for being an "impediment to the reconstruction of the State," replacing him with the Republican who had lost to him in the previous election. Sheridan had been feuding with President
Andrew Johnson for months over interpretations of the Military Reconstruction Acts and voting rights issues, and within a month of the second firing, the president removed Sheridan, stating to an outraged Gen. Grant that, "His rule has, in fact, been one of absolute tyranny, without references to the principles of our government or the nature of our free institutions."
If Sheridan was unpopular in Texas, neither did he have much appreciation for the Lone Star State. In 1866 newspapers quoted him as saying, "If I owned Texas and Hell, I'd rent Texas and live in Hell", a statement which he repeated in later years in various forms.
During the Grant administration, while Sheridan was assigned to duty in the West, he was sent to Louisiana on two additional occasions to deal with problems that lingered in Reconstruction. In January 1875, federal troops intervened in the Louisiana Legislature following attempts by both Republicans and Democrats to seize control by illegal means. Sheridan supported Republican
carpetbagger Governor
William P. Kellogg, winner of the disputed 1872 state election, and declared that all opponents of his regime were "banditti" who should be subjected to military tribunals and loss of their
habeas corpus rights. The Grant administration backed down after an enormous public outcry. A headline in the
New York World newspaper was "Tyranny! A Sovereign State Murdered!" In 1876, Sheridan was sent to New Orleans to command troops keeping the peace in the aftermath of the
disputed presidential election.
Indian Wars
The
Indians on the
Great Plains had been generally peaceful during the Civil War. In 1864,
Major John Chivington, a Colorado militia officer, attacked a peaceful village of
Arapahos and Southern
Cheyenne at
Sand Creek in
Colorado, killing over 150 Indians. That attack ignited a general war with the Indians. The protection of the Great Plains fell under the
Department of the Missouri, an administrative area of over 1,000,000 mi.², encompassing all land between the Mississippi River and the Rocky Mountains. Maj. Gen.
Winfield S. Hancock was assigned to the department in 1866, but had mishandled his campaign, resulting in
Sioux and
Cheyenne raids of retaliation. The Indians continued to attack
mail coaches, burn the stations, and kill the employees. They also raped, killed, and kidnapped a considerable number of settlers on the frontier. Under pressure from the various governors in the Great Plains, General Grant turned to Phil Sheridan.
In August 1867, Grant appointed Sheridan to head the Department of the Missouri and pacify the Plains. His troops, even supplemented with state militia, were spread too thin to have any real effect. He conceived a strategy similar to the one he used in the Shenandoah Valley. In the Winter Campaign of 1868–69 he attacked the Cheyenne,
Kiowa, and
Comanche tribes in their winter quarters, taking their supplies and livestock and killing those who resisted, driving the rest back into their
reservations. By promoting in
Congressional testimony the hunting and slaughter of the vast herds of
American Bison on the Great Plains and by other means, Sheridan helped deprive the Indians of their primary source of food. Professional hunters, trespassing on Indian land, killed over 4 million bison by 1874. When the Texas legislature considered outlawing bison poaching on tribal lands, Sheridan personally testified against it in
Austin, Texas. He suggested that the legislature should give each of the hunters a medal, engraved with a dead buffalo on one side and a discouraged-looking Indian on the other. This strategy continued until the Indians honored their treaties. Sheridan's department conducted the
Red River War, the
Ute War, and the
Black Hills War, which resulted in the death of a trusted subordinate, Lt. Col.
George Armstrong Custer. The Indian raids subsided during the 1870s and were almost over by the early 1880s, as Sheridan became the commanding general of the U.S. Army.
There is an anecdote told concerning Sheridan during his campaign against the Indians. Comanche Chief
Tosawi, or Silver Knife, reputedly told Sheridan in 1869, "Me Tosawi. Me good Indian," to which Sheridan is said to have replied, "The only good Indians I ever saw were dead." This was then misquoted as "The only good Indian is a dead Indian". Sheridan later denied he'd made the statement to Tosawi. Earlier that year, on
May 28, Rep.
James M. Cavanaugh said in the
House, "I have never seen in my life a good Indian ... except when I've seen a dead Indian." That remark may have been mistakenly attributed to Sheridan.
Other assignments
Sheridan was promoted to
lieutenant general on
March 4,
1869.
In 1871, Sheridan was present in
Chicago during the
Great Chicago Fire and coordinated military relief efforts. The mayor, to calm the panic, placed the city under
martial law, and issued a proclamation putting Sheridan in charge. As there were no widespread disturbances, martial law was lifted within a few days. Although Sheridan's personal residence was spared, all of his professional and personal papers were destroyed. When Chicago's
Washington Park Race Track organized the
American Derby in 1883 he served as its first president.
Sheridan served as commander in chief of the
Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States (MOLLUS) veterans' organization from 1886 to 1888.
In 1882, the
Department of the Interior granted rights to the Yellowstone Park Improvement Company to develop 4,000 acres (16 km²) in the park. Their plan was to build a railroad into the park and sell the land to developers. Sheridan personally organized opposition to the plan and lobbied
Congress for protection of the park; including expansion, military control, reducing the development to 10 acres (40,000 m²), and prohibiting leases near park attractions. In addition, he arranged an expedition to the park for President
Chester A. Arthur and other influential men. His lobbying soon paid off. A rider was added to the Sundry Civil Bill of 1883, giving Sheridan and his supporters almost everything for which they'd asked. In 1886, after a string of ineffectual and sometimes criminal superintendents, Sheridan ordered the 1st U.S. Cavalry into the park. The military operated the park until the
National Park Service took it over in 1916.
Philip Sheridan suffered a series of massive heart attacks two months after sending his memoirs to the publisher. Although only 57, hard living and hard campaigning and a lifelong love of good food and drink had taken their toll. Thin in his youth, he'd reached over 200 pounds. After his first heart attack, the U.S. Congress quickly passed legislation to promote him to general and he received the news from a congressional delegation with joy, despite his pain. His family moved him from the heat of Washington and he died in his vacation cottage at
Nonquitt,
Massachusetts. His body was returned to Washington and he was buried on a hillside facing the capital city near
Arlington House in
Arlington National Cemetery. The burial helped elevate Arlington to national prominence. His wife Irene never remarried, saying, "I would rather be the widow of Phil Sheridan than the wife of any man living."
Philip Sheridan, Jr., followed in his father's footsteps and graduated near the bottom of the West Point class of 1902. He served as a cavalry lieutenant, a military aide to President
Theodore Roosevelt, and in Washington with the general staff. He was also felled by a heart attack, at age 37, in 1918.
In memoriam
Fort Sheridan in
Illinois was named to honor General Sheridan's many services to
Chicago.
The
M551 Sheridan tank is named after General Sheridan.
Mt. Sheridan in
Yellowstone National Park was named for Sheridan by Captain John W. Barlow in 1871.
Sheridan appeared on
$10 U.S. Treasury Notes issued in 1890 and 1891. His bust then reappeared on the
$5 Silver Certificate in 1896. These rare notes are in great demand by collectors today.
Sheridan County, Montana,
Sheridan County, Wyoming, and
Sheridan County, Kansas, are named for him, as are the cities of
Sheridan, Montana (in Madison County)
Sheridan, Wyoming,
Sheridan, Arkansas, and
Sheridan, Oregon.
Sheridan Square in the West Village of
New York City is named for the general and his statue is displayed nearby in Christopher Street Park.
Sheridan Circle and Sheridan Street in Washington, D.C., are also named for him.
The only equestrian Civil War statue in
Ohio honors Sheridan. It is in the center traffic circle on
US Route 22 in
Somerset, Ohio, not far from the house where Sheridan grew up.
There is an equestrian statue of Sheridan in front of the New York State Capitol near Sheridan Avenue.
Sheridan Road in
Lawton,
Oklahoma, leads to
Fort Sill, where Sheridan uttered the words "The only good Indians I ever saw were dead."
Sheridan Drive in Arlington National Cemetery partially encircles the area that contains the general's gravesite. The Sheridan Gate, constructed in 1879 and demolished in the 1960s, was once the Cemetery's main entrance.
A statue of Sheridan by
Allen George Newman is sited in
Scranton, Pennsylvania.
Sheridan Road in Chicago and the
North Shore suburbs is named in honor of Philip Sheridan and leads to the Town of Fort Sheridan, the landmark former U.S. Army base now converted to an upscale residential community.
An equestrian statue of Sheridan by
Gutzon Borglum (sculptor of the figures on Mt. Rushmore) at Belmont Avenue and Sheridan Road in Chicago depicts the general on his horse, Rienzi.
In popular media
Philip Sheridan has been portrayed in Hollywood movies and television over the years:
Wide Open Spaces (1924), portrayed by actor Billy Engle.
In Old Chicago (1937), portrayed by Sidney Blackmer.
Santa Fe Trail (1940), portrayed by David Bruce.
They Died with Their Boots On (1941), portrayed by John Litel. The movie inaccurately portrays Sheridan as a colonel and the commandant of the U.S. Military Academy before the start of the Civil War.
Rio Grande (1950), portrayed by J. Carrol Naish.
The Rifleman (1958), featured in an episode where he helps a wounded Confederate veteran on Lucas McCain's ranch. It is revealed that McCain served under Sheridan during the war.
Custer of the West (1968), portrayed by Lawrence Tierney.
Son of the Morning Star (1991) (TV movie), portrayed by Dean Stockwell.
In the television series Babylon 5, the fictional character of Captain John Sheridan (played by Bruce Boxleitner) is said to be a direct descendant of Philip Sheridan.
Further Information
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