Samuel Whitside

Last updated
Samuel Marmaduke Whitside
Smw-1901.jpg
Brig. Gen. S. M. Whitside at Santiago de Cuba, 10 Jun 1901, while serving as Commanding General of the District of Santiago
Born(1839-01-09)January 9, 1839
Toronto, Canada West
DiedDecember 15, 1904(1904-12-15) (aged 65)
Washington, D.C., U.S.
Buried
AllegianceFlag of the United States (1896-1908).svg United States
Service / branch Seal of the United States Department of War.png United States Army
Years of service1858–1902
Rank Union Army brigadier general rank insignia.svg Brigadier general
Unit 6thCav.JPG 6th Cav Regt
7thCav.JPG 7th Cav Regt
5thCav.JPG 5th Cav Regt
10thCav.JPG 10th Cav Regt
Commands B Co, 6th Cav Regt
Camp Livingston, Texas
Camp Huachuca, Arizona
3d & 2d Bns, 7th Cav Regt
Provisional Brigade Commander which included the 5th Cav Regt and 10th Cav Regt
10th Cav Regt
Depts of Eastern Cuba and Santiago & Puerto Prinicipe Cuba
Dist of Santiago
Battles / wars American Civil War

Indian Wars

Cuban Occupation
Awards Union army cpt rank insignia.jpg Brevet Captain
Union army maj rank insignia.jpg Brevet Major
Spouse(s)Carrie P. McGavock
RelationsCol. Warren Whitside (son)
Lt. Col. Archie Miller (son-in-law)
Signature US officer Samuel M. Whitside Signature.jpg

Samuel M. Whitside was a United States Cavalry officer who served from 1858 to 1902. He commanded at every level from company to department for 32 of his 43 years in service, including Army posts such a Camp Huachuca, Jefferson Barracks, and Fort Sam Houston, the Departments of Eastern Cuba and Santiago and Puerto Principe, Cuba, commanded a provisional cavalry brigade (consisting of the 10th and 5th Cavalry Regiments), a squadron in the 7th Cavalry Regiment, and a troop and platoon in the 6th Cavalry Regiment. The pinnacle of his career was serving as the commanding general of the Department of Eastern Cuba before retiring in June 1902 as a brigadier general in the U.S. Army. [1]

Contents

Most history books record three events during his career: the founding of Fort Huachuca, Arizona, the massacre at Wounded Knee, and his continued role as a battalion commander during the Pine Ridge Campaign of 1890–91. These events are arguably the most noteworthy in Whitside's four decades in the U.S. cavalry.

Joining the U.S. Army and service in the American Civil War

S. M. Whitside was born on January 9, 1839, in Toronto, Canada. He grew up in that area attending Normal School, and later moved to New York where he attended Careyville Academy. [2]

He enlisted into the General Mounted Service in 1858 and served for three years at Carlisle Barracks, PA where he was promoted to the rank of Corporal. Corporal Whitside was assigned on July 27, 1861, to the 3rd Cavalry to fill a vacant noncommissioned officer position, and on August 1, he was promoted to sergeant major of the regiment. On August 3, Congress redesignated the 3d Cavalry as the 6th Cavalry Regiment. [2]

Group of 6th U.S. Cavalry officers in camp at Snickers Gap, Va., in 1862, standing, left to right, 2nd Lt. Thos. W. Simson, 1st Lt. Albert Coats. Sitting, left to right, 2nd Lt. Samuel Whitside, Captain August Kautz. Second Lieutenant Samuel M. Whitside at Headquarters, 6th U.S. Cavalry Regiment, ca 1862.jpg
Group of 6th U.S. Cavalry officers in camp at Snickers Gap, Va., in 1862, standing, left to right, 2nd Lt. Thos. W. Simson, 1st Lt. Albert Coats. Sitting, left to right, 2nd Lt. Samuel Whitside, Captain August Kautz.

On November 1, three sergeants were offered commissions; among these was Sergeant Major Samuel M. Whitside. He accepted his appointment as a second lieutenant in the 6th U.S. Cavalry on November 4, 1861, and assumed the duties of a junior officer in Company K. His commander was Captain Charles R. Lowell. [2]

Lieutenant Whitside served with his company in the 6th Cavalry during the Peninsular Campaign of 1862 where he participated in the following battles: Williamsburg – May 5, Slatersville – May 7, New Bridge – May 20, Ellison's Mills – May 23, Hanover Court House – 27 to May 29, Black Creek – June 26, and Malvern Hill – August 5,. [2] [4]

Whitside next served as an aide-de-camp on the staff of Major General Nathaniel Banks, and participated in the Siege of Port Hudson in Louisiana in 1863. However, Whitside suffered from a number of ailments—including smallpox—and was severely injured at the Battle of Culpeper Court House. After briefly serving as an aide to generals John H. Martindale and Alfred Pleasonton, he spent the remainder of the Civil War on recruiting duty in Rhode Island and mustering duty in West Virginia. He later received brevet promotions to captain and major for faithful and meritorious service. [2]

After the war, Whitside became a First Class Companion of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States—a military society of Union officers and their descendants.

Service on the frontier

Whitside served for the next 20 years with the 6th Cavalry commanding B Company at various posts throughout the West.

Founder of Fort Huachuca - Captain Samuel M. Whitside, 6th U.S. Cavalry Regiment, c. 1876. Dissatisfied with the condition of Camp Wallen, on 3 March Whitside led the two companies, consisting of four officers and 127 troopers, approximately nine miles up into the Huachuca Mountains where they encamped near a spring in a heavily wooded area that offered excellent observation over the valleys below. Whitside realized this was the perfect location for the new camp. On 4 March, he ordered initial entries in a journal, identifying their location as "Camp Huachuca, Huachuca Mountains, Arizona Territory, Captain S. M. Whitside Commanding Officer." SMWhitside-1876.jpg
Founder of Fort Huachuca – Captain Samuel M. Whitside, 6th U.S. Cavalry Regiment, c. 1876. Dissatisfied with the condition of Camp Wallen, on 3 March Whitside led the two companies, consisting of four officers and 127 troopers, approximately nine miles up into the Huachuca Mountains where they encamped near a spring in a heavily wooded area that offered excellent observation over the valleys below. Whitside realized this was the perfect location for the new camp. On 4 March, he ordered initial entries in a journal, identifying their location as "Camp Huachuca, Huachuca Mountains, Arizona Territory, Captain S. M. Whitside Commanding Officer."

Texas, 1865–70

Missouri and Kansas, 1871–74

Arizona Territory, Colorado and Dakota Territory 1875–87

After eighteen years as a captain and almost twenty-four years with the 6th Cavalry Regiment, Whitside was transferred to the 7th Cavalry Regiment in 1885 and promoted to major. The 7th was then serving in the Dakota Territory at various posts, including Fort Meade. In 1887 the regiment moved to Fort Riley, Kansas, and a more settled lifestyle. During the previous twenty-two years of service on the frontier, Whitside married and had seven children, four of which died in childhood, and served at over twenty posts, spending an average of ten months at any one location.

Wounded Knee Massacre

Whitside was the major of the 7th Cavalry at the time of the Wounded Knee Massacre in December 1890.

Spanish–American War service

Whitside served during the Spanish–American War as the lieutenant colonel of the 5th Cavalry.

Dates of rank

RankDateUnitComponent
Union army 2nd lt rank insignia.jpg Second Lieutenant 1 Nov 1861K Co., 6th Cavalry Regiment Regular Army
Union army 1st lt rank insignia.jpg First Lieutenant 25 Jan 1864A Co., 6th Cavalry RegimentRegular Army
Union army cpt rank insignia.jpg Captain 20 Oct 1866B Co., 6th Cavalry RegimentRegular Army
Union army maj rank insignia.jpg Major 20 Mar 1885 7th Cavalry Regiment Regular Army
Union Army LTC rank insignia.png Lieutenant Colonel 17 Jul 1895 3rd Cavalry Regiment Regular Army
Union Army colonel rank insignia.png Colonel 16 Oct 1898 10th Cavalry Regiment Regular Army
Union Army brigadier general rank insignia.svg Brigadier General 3 Jan 1901 Volunteers
Union Army brigadier general rank insignia.svg Brigadier General 29 May 1902Regular Army

Personal life

Whitside was married to Caroline P. McGavock of Nashville, Tennessee, for thirty-six years. [8] Of their seven children, three survived to adulthood. [2] Their eldest surviving son, Warren Whitside, became a colonel in the Army Quartermaster Corps and his son, Warren Jr.; served in the U.S. Navy as a captain. [9] Samuel and Caroline's daughter, Madeline, married 1st Lt. Archie Miller, a cavalry officer and eventual Medal of Honor recipient. Their daughter, Caroline, would marry Robert Whitney Burns, a future army lieutenant general. Their youngest child, Victor, became a Major in the Army and commanded an infantry battalion during the Meuse-Argonne Offensive before dying in Germany of pneumonia at the end of World War I.

Whitside, wife Caroline, and their son Victor are buried at Arlington National Cemetery, in Arlington, Virginia. [10]

Notes

  1. Adjutant General's Office, "Statement of Service," (on file at the Washington, DC: National Archives and Records Administration, Pension Application # 819.916, Certificate # 587.095, "Whitside Box").
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Russell, Major Samuel L., "Selfless Service: The Cavalry Career of Brigadier General Samuel M. Whitside from 1858 to 1902." MMAS Thesis, Fort Leavenworth: U.S. Command and General Staff College, 2002.
  3. Defense Supply Association, The Quartermaster Review, March–April 1934 issue, pages 53 and 73.
  4. New York Times, May 7, May 20 and August 9, 1862
  5. Cochran, Orville A. "Samuel Marmaduke Whitside: Trooper to Brigadier General, United States Cavalry 1839–1904 (A Biographical Resume of the Founder of Fort Huachuca, Arizona)." Fort Huachuca, 1964.
  6. Handbook of Texas Online, s.v. "," https://tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/bma19 (accessed June 23, 2010).
  7. Smith, Cornelius C., Jr. Fort Huachuca – The Story of a Frontier Post. Washington DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1976, pp. 23, 27, 32.
  8. Fort Huachua Scout, Vol. 2, No. 17 First White Woman to Live Here Was Wife of Capt. Samuel Whitside, 6 Oct 1955, Fort Huachuca, Arizona
  9. Colonel Warren Webster Whitside Ancestry.com Military Pages
  10. "Burial Detail: Whitside, S M (Section 11, Grave 853)". ANC Explorer. Arlington National Cemetery. (Official website).

Other references

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