Page:Encyclopedia of Virginia Biography volume 3.djvu/82

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VIRGLXIA BIOGRAPHY


corps in the department of Texas. In 1853- 55 he supervised western river improve- ments, and in 1858 was acting inspec- tor-general in the Utah expedition. On June 28, i860, he was made quartermaster- general, U. S. A., and resigned April 22, 1861, thus ending a service of thirty-one years with but a single brief break, as an officer. At once commissioned major-gen- eral of \'irginia volunteers, he was asso- ciated with Gen. Robert E. Lee in the work of organization. Later he was called to Montgomery, the capital of the Confederacy to receive commission as brigadier-general. He was assigned to command at Harper's I-erry, but .soon transferred his troops to Winchester, and thence, in July, 1861, went to the assistance of Beauregard at Manas- sas ^nd turned the tide against the enemy. After Bull Run, Johnston, as ranking offi- cer, combined all the troops there. In 1S62 he attacked McClellan at Seven Pines (Fair Oaks), and was severely wounded. Early in 1863 he was given command in the south- west, at first stationed at Chattanooga. AVhen Grant began his investment of Vicks- burg, Johnston was ordered to the command of all forces in Mississippi. He ordered Pemberton to evacuate Vicksburg, but the order was disregarded and Vicksburg, with its garrison surrendered. Beginning in December, 1863, Johnston faced Sherman, who was then invading Georgia. Johnston's conduct of his slow retreat was a master- piece of military skill, but did not meet the approval of the Confederate authorities, and he was superseded by Hood. Later Johnston was given command of the troops in North Carolina, and with an inferior force harrassed Sherman severely in his march to the coast, but was unable to de-


feat him. Following the surrender of Lee at Appomattox, Johnston met Sherman and they united on terms that the Washington government thought too liberal. The two generals subsequently arranged another agreement based on the Grant-Lee terms, and which marked the end. Gen. Johnston met the changed conditions with manly for- titude. He represented the Richmond dis- trict in congress in 1877, and served as rail- ri'ad commissioner under President Cleve- land. He wrote "A Narrative of Military Operations during the Late War between the States." He died in Washington City, March 21, 1891. He had been suffering from a heart ailment aggravated by a cold contracted at the funeral of Gen. Sherman, on which occasion he was an honorary pall- bearer. Grant's estimate of Johnston rnay be noted: "I have had nearly all the south- ern generals in high command in front of me, and Joe Johnston gave me more anxie- ty than any of the others." And Sherman speaks of him as "equal in all the elements 01 generalshi]) to Lee."

Jones, Catesby ap Roger, horn in Clark county, Virginia, about 182 1, was a son of Roger Jones, adjutant-general of the United States army and of Mary Anne (Mason) Page, his wife and a descendant of Roger Jones, who was captain of a government vessel in the days of Lord Culpeper, govern- 01 of Virginia. He received an appointment as midshipman at an early age and served under his uncle Commodore Thomas ap Catesby Jones, then in command of the "Ex- ploring Expedition." He served through the war with Mexico, at first in the gulf and then on the western coast, and was at one time attached to the naval batteries at the