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ALEXANDER, EDWARDPORTER


Alexander, Edward Porter


(May 26, 1835–April 28, 1910)
Confederate General


T


he versatile Alexan-
der was the South’s
ablest artillerist and
did much to enhance the
efficiency of the Confeder-
ate artillery arm. His ser-
vices proved so valuable
that he became one of a
handful of officers that
Gen. Robert E. Leere-
fused to transfer from his
staff. After the Civil War,
Alexander distinguished
himself in a variety of en-
gineering, educational, and
diplomatic capacities.
Edward Porter Alex-
ander was born in Wash-
ington, Georgia, into a
relatively affluent family.
He gained admittance to
West Point in 1853 and
four years later gradu-
ated third in his class of 38 as a second lieu-
tenant of engineers. He also studied at a time
when cadets were under the aegis of Superin-
tendent Robert E. Lee. Alexander showed
great promise as a young officer, and for sev-
eral months thereafter he functioned as an
academy instructor. In October 1858, he rose
to first lieutenant and traveled west as part of
Col. Albert Sidney Johnston’s expedition


against the Mormons, but
he subsequently returned
to the academy when that
maneuver was canceled.
Back at West Point, Alex-
ander next cooperated
with Maj. Albert J. Myer
and helped pioneer a new
system of signaling. The
“wigwam,” or semaphore,
system employed a series
of flags or lanterns to
communicate informa-
tion between army units
and over vast distances.
Although primitive by
today’s standards, it
proved perfectly func-
tional and was widely
employed by both sides
during the Civil War.
Shortly after, Alexander
transferred to the West
Coast and spent several months performing
garrison duty at Fort Steilacoom, Washington
Territory. By this time the first wave of South-
ern secessions began wracking the American
polity. Alexander never advocated secession
from the Union, but once the process began in
the spring of 1861, he resigned his commis-
sion and tendered his services to the Confed-
eracy. “My people are going to war,” he de-

Edward Porter Alexander
Library of Congress
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