America\'s Military Adversaries. From Colonial Times to the Present

(John Hannent) #1
38–45; Summers, Festus P. “The Jones-Imboden
Raid.” West Virginia History47 (1988): 53–62;
Thomas, Clayton M. “The Military Career of John D.
Imboden.” Unpublished master’s thesis, University
of Virginia, 1965; West, Jeffrey. From Winchester to

Cedar Creek: The Shenandoah Campaign of 1864.
New York: Simon and Schuster, 1997; Woodward,
Harold R. Defender of the Valley: Brigadier General
John Daniel Imboden, C.S.A.Berryville, MA: Rock-
bridge Pub, 1996.

JACKSON, THOMASJ. “STONEWALL”


Jackson, Thomas J. “Stonewall”


(January 21, 1824–May 10, 1863)
Confederate General


“S


tonewall” Jack-
son was one of
the Civil War’s
great battle captains.
Pious and uncommunica-
tive, he possessed an un-
canny, intuitive grasp of
Confederate Gen. Robert
E. Lee’s orders, almost
before they were issued.
His untimely death rob-
bed the Army of Northern
Virginia of its cutting
edge and undoubtedly
hastened the Confeder-
acy’s downfall.
Thomas Jonathan Jack-
son was born into a life of
poverty in Clarksburg, Vir-
ginia (present-day West
Virginia), on January 21,



  1. Orphaned at an
    early age, he was raised
    by his uncle. In 1842, he
    gained admission to the
    U.S. Military Academy at
    West Point. Jackson pos-
    sessed only a rudimentary education and was
    unprepared for the academic rigors he en-
    countered. Nonetheless, he worked diligently
    and graduated seventeenth out of a class of
    59 four years later. Jackson then joined the
    army of Gen. Winfield Scott as a second lieu-


tenant of artillery in 1847,
and he won consecutive
brevet promotions to
major during the Mexi-
can-American War for
gallantry at the Battles of
Vera Cruz, Cerro Gordo,
and Chapultepec.
After the war, Jackson
performed routine garri-
son duty in Florida and
New York, but he re-
signed in February 1852
to teach artillery tactics
and natural philosophy at
the Virginia Military Insti-
tute (VMI). Uninspiring
as a teacher, his stern, in-
flexible, and methodical
nature made him unpopu-
lar and reinforced his
reputation as an eccen-
tric religious fanatic. At
this stage in his life, he
was referred to by many
students as “Fool Tom
Jackson.” He studiously
avoided public life, but in 1859 he com-
manded the VMI Cadet Corps at the hanging
of abolitionist John Brown. When the Civil
War broke out in April 1861, Jackson, who did
not support secession, sided with his state
and gained appointment as a colonel. His first

Thomas J. “Stonewall” Jackson
National Archives
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