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Nathaniel Lyon

July 14, 1818 – August 9, 1861

Infamous for his quick temper, Brigadier General Nathaniel Lyon was killed during the Battle of Wilson's Creek, on August 9, 1861, making him the first Union general to die in combat during the American Civil War.

Nathaniel Lyon was born on July 14, 1818, in Ashford, Connecticut. He was the seventh of nine children of Amasa Lyon and Kezia Knowlton Lyon. Lyon's father was a farmer and local justice of the peace. During his youth, Lyon worked on the family farm and attended public schools. In 1837, Lyon received an appointment to the United States Military Academy. He graduated eleventh in his class of fifty-two cadets on July 1, 1841.

After graduating from West Point, Lyon served in the 2nd U.S. Infantry in Florida, where he participated in the Seminole Wars. In 1842, he transferred to garrison duty to Sackets Harbor, New York. While there, officials court-martialed him and placed him on suspension for five months for severely beating an enlisted man.

Like many of his fellow West Point graduates, Lyon participated in the Mexican-American War (1846-1848). During that conflict, Lyon attained the rank of first lieutenant on February 16, 1847. Later that year, on August 20, he became a brevet captain, "for gallant and meritorious conduct in the battles of Contreras and Churubusco."

After the Mexican-American War, Lyon briefly served at Ft. Hamilton, New York, 1848. The next year, he transferred to California, where he served at various posts until 1853. While in California, Lyon led an expedition against the Pomo Indians in 1850 in retaliation for the killing of two white men. During the campaign, in an event known as the Bloody Island Massacre, Lyon directed the extermination of between sixty and four hundred innocent Indians whom he misidentified as the group he was pursuing. Later during the operation, his soldiers killed seventy-five more Indians along the Russian River. One year later, Lyon attained the rank of captain.

In 1854, Lyon transferred to Jefferson Barracks, Missouri and, then, to Fort Riley in Kansas, during the Border War between Kansas and Missouri. While stationed in Kansas, Lyon was witness to the atrocities perpetrated by Missouri Border Ruffians and Kansas Jayhawkers. Lyon sided with the Free-Soilers. Although he was not an abolitionist, Lyon developed a deep enmity for Missouri slaveholders and their supporters.

As the Union began to unravel after the election of President Abraham Lincoln, Lyon deployed, along with two companies of infantrymen, to guard the federal arsenal at St. Louis, in January 1861. While stationed there, Lyon developed a friendship with Congressman Frank Blair, a prominent Radical Republican. Lyon used his influence with Blair to engineer his appointment as commander of the St. Louis arsenal.

After the fall of Fort Sumter, Lyon suspected that Missouri secessionists, led by Governor Claiborne Jackson and the state militia, were plotting to seize the St. Louis arsenal. On May 10, 1861, Lyon ordered his troops to surround and to imprison approximately 670 members of the Missouri Volunteer Militia who were training at Camp Jackson, near St. Louis. Lyon then marched his prisoners through the streets of St. Louis, thereby inciting pro-secessionist residents to protest. When a riot ensued, Lyon's soldiers fired on the angry crowd, killing twenty-eight civilians and wounding as many as fifty more. Lyon's actions fanned anti-Union flames in Missouri. On May 11, the Missouri General Assembly approved a measure that created the Missouri State Guard, commanded by former Governor Sterling Price, and that granted Governor Jackson with extensive executive powers to resist Union forces in the state.

Following the Camp Jackson Affair, Price met with Lyon's superior officer, Brigadier-General William S. Harney, commander of the Department of the West. In an attempt to maintain peace in Missouri, the two men concluded a pact known as the Price-Harney Agreement on May 21, 1861. The agreement charged the Missouri State Guard with the responsibility of protecting pro-Unionist citizens in Missouri. When Price proved unable to fulfill his end of the bargain, Blair contrived to have Lyon replace Harney. Officials promoted Lyon to the rank of brigadier-general effective May 17, 1861 and relieved Harney of his command on May 30.

On June 11, 1861, Governor Jackson met with the freshly-appointed commander of the Department of the West at the Planter's House Hotel in St. Louis, in an eleventh-hour attempt to avert war in Missouri. After four hours of wrangling proved fruitless, Lyon, who was combative by nature, abruptly stormed out of the meeting declaring, "This means war."

Governor Jackson returned to the Missouri capital at Jefferson City and evacuated the state government to Boonville on June 13, 1861. Two days later, Lyon landed an invasion force by steamboat and occupied Jefferson City unopposed. Lyon then pursued Jackson and routed Price and the Missouri State Guard at the Battle of Boonville on June 17. Jackson and the pro-secessionist members of the general assembly fled to the southwest corner of the state, leaving most of Missouri under federal control.

Throughout the summer, Price's State Guard received reinforcements from other southern states. The Confederates united and reorganized their troops to form the Army of the West, commanded by Brigadier-General Ben McCulloch. As McCulloch's army continued to grow, Lyon determined to go on the offensive. On August 9, 1861, he led nearly 5,400 Union soldiers out of Springfield, Missouri to assault over eleven thousand Rebels encamped near Wilson's Creek, approximately twelve miles southwest of the city. Lyon's surprise attack, on the morning of August 10, caught the Confederates off guard. The Federals initially drove the Rebels back, but the Southerners eventually halted the Union advance. The Confederates launched three counterattacks during the day, but despite being outnumbered over two to one, the Federals held their ground. During the course of the battle, Lyon was killed, making him the first Union general to die in combat during the Civil War. Major Samuel D. Sturgis took command of the Union army and, as his exhausted soldiers ran low on ammunition, ordered a retreat later in the day. The Rebels were too spent to pursue.

During the confusion caused by the retreat, Lyon's body was left on the battlefield, where Rebel soldiers recovered it. The Confederates buried Lyon's remains on a Union soldier's farm near Springfield. Lyon's relatives later claimed the body for re-burial in the family plot at Phoenixville Cemetery, in Windham County, Connecticut. The general's funeral train stopped for observances in Cincinnati, Philadelphia, New York, and Hartford back to his hometown. Lyon's body was interred in its final resting place on September 5, 1861.

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