Nathaniel Thomas Green
Soldier, Lawyer and Statesman, Hero of the Texas Revolution.
Born: June 8, 1814
Soldier, Lawyer and Statesman, Hero of the Texas Revolution.
Birthplace: Buckingham County, Virginia
Father: Judge Nathan Green, Sr., (1792-1866)
(Buried: Cedar Grove Cemetery, Lebanon, Tennessee)
Mother: Mary Field, (1792-1849)
(Buried: Winchester City Cemetery)
Wife: Mary Wallace Chalmers, (1828-1866)
Daughter of John Gordon Chalmers, editor and politician—U.S. Senator from Mississippi
(Buried: Oakwood Cemetery, Austin, Texas)
Married: January 31, 1847
Children:
Mary Wallace Lane, (1847-1926).
(Buried Maverick Co. Cemetery, Eagle Pass, Texas)
Eliza Chalmers Neil; (1849-1931)
Alice Bentley, (1850-1940)
(Buried Abilene Municipal Cemetery, Abilene, Texas)
Jeanette Haydon, (1853-1932)
(Buried Forest Lawn Memorial Park, Glendale, California)
Thomas Green, Jr.; (1857-1886)
(Buried Maverick County Cemetery, Eagle Pass, Texas)
Laura Hodgson, (1859-1940)
(Buried Mount Olivet Cemetery, Nashville, Tennessee)
Religion: Methodist
Education:
Jackson College, Tennessee
Princeton College, Kentucky
Degree from University of Tennessee, 1834
Studied law with father, prominent Judge on Tennessee Supreme Court
1836-37 continued studies after Texas Revolution
Political Party: Democratic
Nickname: Tom, "Murat of the West"
Occupation before Civil War:
Left Tennessee to fight in Texas Revolution; arrived Nacodoches 1835; enrolled in Army January 14, 1836. Artillery company manning the Twin Sisters during Battle of San Jacinto. Commissioned Lieutenant two days after battle April 21; May 1836 made Major and named Aide-de-Camp to General Thomas J. Rusk.
Resigned May 30, 1836, returned to Tennessee to continue Law Studies. Returned to Texas 1837.
Became County Surveyor, LaGrange Co., Texas 1837; elected Engrossing Clerk* for House of Representatives (Texas Congress); elected to Texas House, 1839. Secretary of Senate for 6th & 8th Congresses. 1841-61, Clerk Texas Supreme Court.
During Texas Republic, served in numerous military expeditions against Mexico and Indians; 1841 Colorado River expedition vs Comanches; 1842 Vasquez expedition—raised volunteer Company in Travis County; Inspector General for Somervell expedition after Woll's invasion.
Mexican War: Recruited and led company of Texas Rangers as part of John C. Hays' First Texas Regiment of Mounted Riflemen, instrumental in capture of Monterrey, September 1846.
Civil War Career: Elected Colonel Fifth Texas Volunteer Cavalry (Sibley's Brigade), invaded New Mexico 1862.
Battle of Val Verde, February 20-21, 1862
Recapture of Galveston, January 1, 1863
Spring 1863, Fighting along Bayou Teche, Louisiana leading Taylor's First Cavalry Brigade
Promoted Brigadier General on May 20, 1863
June-November 1863: Victories at Brashear City, Louisiana; Cox's Plantation; Stirling Plantation; Bayou Bourbeaux. During period, inflicted approximately 3,000 casualties, suffered 600.
April 1864 victory over USA Gen. Nathaniel P. Banks at Mansfield and William Emory at Pleasant Hill, LA., effectively ending the Red River Campaign, saving Texas from invasion.
Died: April 12, 1864
Place of Death: Blair's Landing (Plantation), Louisiana
Cause of Death: Artillery shell to head
Age at time of Death: 49
Burial Place: Oakwood Cemetery, Austin, Texas
Quotes About: "Historian John D. Winters in The Civil War in Louisiana (1963) quotes a Texas soldier who fought under Green: "He was a man who, when out of whiskey, was a mild mannered gentleman, but when in good supply of old burst-head was all fight." Winters continues: "Well fortified with Louisiana rum, Green with a yell told [his men] that he was going to show them how to fight. The charge against the gunboats was made on horseback. Green was killed well in advance, a cannon shot taking off the top of his head. ... Drunk or sober, foolish or not in waging the attack, Green was a valuable man, and General Taylor lamented him." (Wikipedia)
"Upon his death, Union Admiral David Dixon Porter paid tribute to the fallen Confederate cavalryman in saying that Green was "one in whom the rebels place more confidence than anyone else. He led his men to the very edge of the bank, they shouting and yelling like madmen—losing General Green has paralyzed them; he was worth 5,000 men to them." (Wikipedia)
"His coolness under the heaviest fire and intrepidity under the most trying circumstances are sufficiently attested to by the results. I cannot commend Colonel Green more highly to the favorable consideration of the Executive." Henry H. Sibley, following the Battle of Val
Verde, NM Territory.
General Banks said of him, "…he was the ablest officer in their service."
Interesting Facts:
- Tom Green County, Texas, geographically 17th largest in the state, is named for the General. It was one of the largest counties in the state at the time of its designation in 1874, over 60,000 square miles (now 1,541 sq.mi.).
- He reportedly disliked his first name, Nathaniel, and repeatedly got into fistfights with another Nathanial, so he began using his middle name, Tom.
- He was "over 6 feet tall and weighed nearly 200 pounds" as described at the Battle of San Jacinto.
- After the loss at Glorieta Pass, Sibley "abandoned the army" and Green commanded the troops in their long, difficult return to Texas.
- In the recapture of Galveston, Green and his men, serving under General Magruder, were on two cottonclads—Neptune and Bayou City (Neptune sank), and captured the Federal flagship, Harriet Lane.
- General Banks said of him, "…he was the ablest officer in their service"
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