biography
| name: |
Halleck, Henry (Wager)
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| sex:
| male
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| lived:
| (1815–72)
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| biography:
| US soldier, born in Westernville, New York, USA. He trained at West Point (1839), and established a reputation as an authority on military defence before serving in California (1847–53). He resigned to study law (1854) and wrote two once-important books on mining law. Highly successful in both law and business, he accepted a commission as a major-general when the Civil War broke out (1861). He was named general-in-chief of the Union armies (1862–4), but overly devoted to details, and cold in his dealings with others, he proved indecisive and ineffectual in engagements and was effectively demoted when Grant became supreme commander (Mar 1864). Despite his lack of success in the war, he stayed on in various commands almost to his death. |
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