Robert E. Lee was born on January 19, 1807 in Stafford, Virginia.
The son of Lighthorse Harry Lee and was educated at the U.S. Military
academy.
In 1829 he graduated second in his class receiving a commission as
second lieutenant in 1836 and captain in 1838. He distinguished himself in
the Mexican War and was wounded in the storming of Chapultepec in 1847;
for his meritorious service he received his third promotion in rank.
He became superintendent of the U.S. Military Academy and later
appointed colonel of calvery. He was in command of the Department of
Texas in 1860 and early the following year was summoned to Washington,
D.C., when war between the states seemed imminent.
President Abraham Lincoln offered him the field of command of the
Union forces but Lee refused. On April, 20 when Virginia succeeded from
the Union, he submitted his resignation of the U.S. Army.
On April 23 he became commander in chief of the military and naval
forces of Virginia. For a year he was military adviser to Jefferson Davis,
president of the Confederate States of America, and was then placed in
command of the Army in northern Virginia.
In February 1865 Lee was made commander in chief of all
Confederate armies; two months later the war was virtually ended by his
surrender to General Ulysses S. Grant at Appomattox Court House.
The masterly strategy of Lee was overcome only by the superior
resources and troop strength of the Union. His campaigns are almost
universally studied in military schools as models of strategy and tactics, He
had a capacity for anticipating the actions of his opponents and for
comprehending their weaknesses.
He made skillful use of interior lines of communication and kept a
convex front toward the enemy so that his reinforcements, transfers, and
supplies could reach their destination over short, direct routes. His greatest
contribution to military practice however was his use of field fortifications as
aids to maneuvering.
He recognized that a small body of soldiers protected by
entrenchments can hold an enemy force of many times their number, while
the main body outflanks the enemy attacks a smaller force elsewhere. In his
application of this principle Lee was years ahead of his time; the tactic was
not fully understood or generally adopted until the 20th century.
He applied for but was never granted the official postwar amnesty. He
accepted the presidency of Washington College, now Washington and Lee
University. In the fall of 1865 within a few years it had become and
outstanding institution.
On October 12, 1870 Lee died at the University and has long been
revered as an ideal by southerners and as a hero by all Americans. His
antevellum home is now known as Arlington House, the Robert E. Lee
Memorial, and is a national memorial. In 1975 Lee's citizenship was restored
posthumously by an act of the U.S. Congress.
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