Brigadier General James Monroe Williams

Alfred Sully (May 22, 1820 – April 27, 1879), was a military officer during the American Civil War and during the Indian Wars on the frontier. He was also a noted painter.[1]

Biography

Our Camp at Cha-ink-pah River, watercolor, by Alfred Sully, c. 1856

Sully was the son of the portrait painter, Thomas Sully, of Pennsylvania.[2] Alfred Sully graduated from West Point in 1841. During and after the American Civil War, Sully served in the Plains States and was widely regarded as an Indian fighter. Sully, like his father, was a watercolorist and oil painter. Between 1849 and 1853, he became chief quartermaster of the U.S. troops at Monterey, California, after California came under American jurisdiction. Then, Sully created a number of watercolor and some oil paintings reflecting the social life of Monterey during that period.

Commands

Sully headed US troops out of Ft. Leavenworth, Kansas, in June 1861 as captain and occupied the city of St Joseph, Missouri, declaring martial law. Violent secessionist uprisings in the city during the early Civil War prompted Sully's occupation.

Sully was commissioned colonel of the 1st Minnesota Volunteer Infantry on February 3, 1862. He led his regiment during the Peninsula Campaign, sustaining a minor wound at Glendale. Sully was promoted to brigadier general on September 26 and led a brigade in the II Corps during the Battle of Chancellorsville, but on May 1, 1863, was removed from command by his division commander, Brig. Gen John Gibbon after failing to suppress a mutiny by the 34th New York when several of its companies refused to fight on the grounds that their two-year enlistment term was about to expire. Gibbon attempted to have Sully court-martialed for dereliction of duty, although a court of inquiry found him innocent of these charges, he was removed from command of his brigade and exiled to the Great Plains, never to serve in the Civil War again.

After being relieved of command, Sully went west and gained notoriety for committing several massacres against natives. On September 3, 1863, at Whitestone Hill, Dakota Territory, as reprisal for the Dakota Conflict of 1862, his troops destroyed a village of some 500 tipis that lodged Yankton, Dakota, Hunkpapa and Sihasapa Lakota. Warriors, along with women and children, were killed or captured. The troopers' casualties were small.[3] On June 28, 1864, in response to the killing of his science officer and topographical engineer, Captain John Feilner, while conducting a field survey, Sully ordered the heads of those Indians believed responsible hung from poles on a hill overlooking the Missouri River.[4][5] With the end of the Civil War, Sully's commission as a brigadier general expired and he reverted to the rank of major in the regular army. Despite frequent bouts of ill health, he continued serving in the Indian Wars until his death at Ft. Vancouver, Oregon, on April 27, 1879. The cause of death was ruled to be an aortic hemorrhage due to complications from an esophageal ulcer. Sully was buried in Laurel Hill Cemetery, Philadelphia.[6]

Marriage

Sully was married three times.

After the Mexican War, in 1851, Sully was posted as Quartermaster to the Presidio of Monterey, California, and married María Manuela Antonia Jimeno y de la Guerra. Tragically, soon after childbirth, Manuela died in 1852. Compounding the tragedy was the death of their newborn son, Thomas, 18 days later.[7]

From September 1856 through May 1857, Sully was posted to Fort Pierre, Nebraska Territory (now South Dakota). He met and, by Sioux tribal custom, married a young French-Yankton girl of the Yankton Sioux tribe. With this marriage, Sully became the son-in-law of Saswe, a.k.a. François Deloria (Saswe being the Dakota pronunciation of François), a powerful Yankton medicine man and chief of the "Half-Breed band".

In 1869, Sully married Sophia Henrietta Palmer in Manhattan, New York.

Descendants

Sully's daughter by his Yankton Sioux wife, Mary Sully, was known as Akicita Win (Soldier Woman).[8] She married Rev. Philip Joseph Deloria, an Episcopal priest, a.k.a. Tipi Sapa (Black Lodge), a leader of the Yankton/Nakota band of the Sioux Nation.[9] Tipi Sapa is featured as one of the 98 Saints of the Ages at the National Cathedral in Washington, D.C., as the first Dakota Christian minister to his own people.[10] Among their descendants are Yankton Sioux Ella Deloria, an ethnologist, and her nephew Vine Deloria, Jr., a scholar, writer, author of Custer Died for Your Sins.[11]

References

  1. ^ "Alfred Sully biography". Archived from the original on 2013-07-07. Retrieved 2013-07-07.
  2. ^ "Alfred Sully anecdote". Archived from the original on 2010-07-13. Retrieved 2008-09-14.
  3. ^ "Battle of Whitestone Hill (September 3, 1863), North Dakota State Historic Site". Archived from the original on 2008-05-16. Retrieved 2008-09-27.
  4. ^ The Washington Post Magazine, September 16, 2007, p. 34. See also Ernest L. Schusky, The Forgotten Sioux: an ethnohistory of the lower brule reservation, Nelson-Hall Inc., Chicago, Illinois, 1975, p.52.
  5. ^ "H74-009". sddigitalarchives.contentdm.oclc.org. Retrieved 2022-09-16.
  6. ^ Blair, Jayne E. (2014-12-09). The Essential Civil War: A Handbook to the Battles, Armies, Navies and Commanders. McFarland. ISBN 978-1-4766-0676-7.
  7. ^ Hylsop, Stephen G. (2012). "Courtship and Conquest:Alfred Sully's Intimate Intrusion at Monterey". California History. 90 (1): 4–17. doi:10.2307/41853237. JSTOR 41853237. Retrieved July 25, 2020.
  8. ^ "Alfred Sully | North Dakota Studies". ndstudies.gov. Archived from the original on 2015-10-17.
  9. ^ admin. "Homepage". Episcopal News Service. Retrieved 2022-09-16.
  10. ^ "Litany of Native Saints includes Tipi Sapa's name" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-05-25. Retrieved 2008-09-14.
  11. ^ "Ella Deloria Archive – About". zia.aisri.indiana.edu. Retrieved 2022-09-16.

External links

Further reading

  • Barth, Aaron L. "Imagining a Battlefield at a Civil War Mistake: The Public History of Whitestone Hill, 1863 to 2013." The Public Historian, Vol. 35, No. 3, pp. 72–97, University of California Press, August 2013. ISSN 0272-3433, electronic ISSN 1533-8576.
  • Beck, Paul Norman. "Columns of vengeance : soldiers, Sioux, and the Punitive Expeditions, 1863-1864" Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press, May 17, 2013. ISBN 978-0806143446
  • Clodfelter, Micheal. "The Dakota War: The United States Army vs the Sioux, 1862-65". McFarland Publishing Co. February 1, 1998. ISBN 978-0786404193
  • Deloria, Vine, Jr. "Singing for a Spirit: A Portrait of the Dakota Sioux." Clear Light Publishing (August 1, 1999). ISBN 978-1574160253
  • Sully, Langdon. "No Tears for the General: The Life of Alfred Sully, 1821-1879" American West Publishing Co. (1974). ISBN 978-0910118330