Pleasant A. Hackleman, Date of Birth, Place of Birth, Date of Death

    

Pleasant A. Hackleman

Union Army general

Date of Birth: 15-Nov-1814

Place of Birth: Franklin County, Indiana, United States

Date of Death: 03-Oct-1862

Profession: judge, lawyer, politician, military officer

Nationality: United States

Zodiac Sign: Scorpio


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About Pleasant A. Hackleman

  • Pleasant Adams Hackleman (November 15, 1814 – October 3, 1862) was a lawyer, politician and Union general who was killed during the American Civil War. Hackleman was born in Franklin County, in 1814.
  • He married Sarah Bradburn in 1833 and began his life as a farmer.
  • He studied law and eventually passed the bar and began practicing law.
  • From 1837-1841 he served as probate judge of Rush County, Indiana.
  • In 1840 he became editor of the Rushville Republican until the war.
  • In 1841 he was elected to the Indiana State Legislature and served as a delegate to the National Republican Convention in Chicago which elected Abraham Lincoln as the Republican presidential candidate. On May 20, 1861, when the Civil War began, Indiana Governor Oliver P.
  • Morton appointed Hackleman colonel of the 16th Indiana Volunteer Infantry of one-year volunteers.
  • Hackleman and the 16th Indiana were sent to the Eastern Theater where they were engaged at the Battle of Ball's Bluff.
  • On April 28, 1862 he was promoted to brigadier general of volunteers and ordered to report to Ulysses S.
  • Grant in the Western Theater.
  • Hackleman was assigned to command the 1st Brigade in the 2nd Division of the Army of the Tennessee.
  • The 2nd Division, led by Thomas A.
  • Davies, was temporarily attached to William S.
  • Rosecrans' Army of the Mississippi stationed around Corinth, Mississippi.
  • On October 3, the Confederate Army attacked Rosecrans.
  • Early in the fighting the Confederates forced a gap between Davies and General Thomas J.
  • McKean's divisions and the Union line began to fall back.
  • At this point in the battle Hackleman attempted to rally his brigade and was shot through the neck.
  • He was taken to the Tishomingo Hotel in Corinth where he lay dying from the mortal wound.
  • His final words were: "I am dying, but I die for my country".
  • His body was returned to his home in Rushville where he was buried.
  • He was the only Indiana general to be killed in battle during the Civil War. Hackleman is the namesake of the rural community of Hackleman, Indiana.

Read more at Wikipedia