General ulysses s grant family tree
Home / Historical Figures / General ulysses s grant family tree
His parents refused to come to their wedding, because the Dent family were slave holders, and the Grants disagreed with slavery.[3][4] Ulysess and Julia were the parents of three sons and one daughter:[5]
- Frederick Dent Grant (1850-1912)[6]
- Ulysses Simpson Grant Jr.
(1852-1929)[7][8]
- Ellen "Nellie" Wrenshall (Grant) Jones (1855-1922)[9]
- Jesse Root Grant (1858-1934)[10]
1844 to 1861
Ulysses from 1844 to 1846 fought in the Mexican-American War. After his marriage, his assignments take him to Detroit, New York, then the West Coast.
In his memoir, he doesn't remember ever being punished at home, "either by scolding or by the rod." [1]
| 1843 |
Ulysses' father applied to West Point for him, when the Honorable Thomas Morris sent a letter confirming his entry to West Point, Ulysees said "But I won't go," his father said he was going, so Ulysses knew he'd be going to West Point.
Grant establishes the first 8-hour work day for federal employees.
Sources
- ↑ 1.01.11.2 Grant, Ulysses S. (Ulysses Simpson) 1822-1885, Personal Memoirs of General U. S. Grant - Complete Personal Memoirs of General US.
Grant
- ↑ Read more about his name at American Ancestors by NEGHS fka Ulysses Simpson Grant
- ↑ "Missouri, County Marriage, Naturalization, and Court Records, 1800-1991", FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:668M-4DY1 : Sat Mar 09 17:37:07 UTC 2024), Entry for Ulysses Grant and Julia Dent, 1848.
- ↑ Roberts, Gary Boyd.
[2] Ulysses was more excited about traveling to West Point then he was about attending.
Here are some links to help you with determining genealogical information about Ulysses S. Grant.
Hiram Ulysses Grant (1822 - 1885)
Biography
Lieutenant Ulysses S.
Grant served with the United States Army during the Mexican-American War
Service Started: 1846
Unit(s): unknown
Service Ended: 1848
General Ulysses S. Grant served in the United States Civil War.
Side: USA
Ulysses S. Grant is Notable.
Hiram Ulysses Grant was the 18th President of the United States, during the Civil War he was the Commanding General of the US Army.
His friends and sons were convinced he didn't care, and the evidence shows they were correct.
On December 24, 1883, Grant slipped on the pavement outside his home while handing a cab driver a $20 bill. In August 1854, he returned to Missouri and started working a 60-acre farm near St. Louis that his father-in-law had given to Julia.
He built a home, sells wood in St.
Louis, and unable to turn a profit, he was forced to pawn his pocket watch and chain in 1857 to buy his family Christmas presents. He signs the amnesty bill for the men who served in the Confederate Army.. Grant Parish, Louisiana is also named in his honor. He proved very successful in his business ventures and owned leather goods stores in Bethel, Ohio, Covington, Kentucky, and Galena, Illinois.
Hannah Simpson (1798 - 1883) - She rarely discussed her son with anyone while he was a general and a president, especially not the press.
Mark Twain remained at his side during those four months, editing the pages as Grant wrote.[14]
| 19 July 1885 |
Ulysses finished his two book memoirs on 18 July 1885, and just a week later on 23 July 1885 he died at his home in Mount MacGregor, New York.
He falls heavily on his side and suffers a serious injury to his hip, remaining bedridden for weeks and walking with a cane or crutches for the rest of his life.
The brokerage firm that he had invested in failed in May 1884, and Grant lost his family’s fortune, begging for a personal loan from William Vanderbilt, which he eventually repaid with his war trophies and uniforms.
The failure plunged Grant into a prolonged depression, and in September, he was diagnosed with cancer in the throat.
Most of his memoirs cover the battles during the Civil War.[19]
Orvil Lynch Grant (1835 - 1881) - He had been a businessman in Chicago, Illinois, and lost everything in the Great Chicago Fire of 1875.
Grant slowly starved out Lee’s men, and on April 9, 1865, Lee surrendered to Grant in the McLean House in Appomattox, Virginia.
When the Union soldiers got too impassioned, Grant showed his great decency and delicately quieted them, saying, “The war is over, the Rebels are again our countrymen, and the best sign of rejoicing is to abstain from all demonstrations in the field.”
In his memoirs, Grant said that he felt no exultation on the surrender; rather, he felt sad and depressed for the foe that had suffered so much for a cause.
Grant is mentioned on several occasions in Col.
Stephen Russell Clark's letters to his wife, Del. It appears they were side by side during the besiege of Petersburg and the surrendering of Lee at the Appomattox as Col. Clark was with the Ohio 13th O.V.C.
In 1866, Grant was given the grade of full general, a rank held only by George Washington previously.
Twain sent out former Union soldiers, door to door, to gather subscriptions to purchase Grant's memoirs, they were able to gather 350,000 subscriptions.[14]
Grant's cancer spread throughout his body, to the point he was never without pain. Pages 302- 328.
He moved his family to Galena, Illinois, and accepted a job as a clerk in his brother’s leather shop, living comfortably in a snug house overlooking a cemetery.
At about this time, the Civil War broke out, and Grant applied to serve as an officer when a call for troops went out.
On June 17, 1861, Grant was appointed a Colonel of the 21st Illinois Infantry, and in August, he was appointed Brigadier General.
His first engagement as a General was the Battle of Belmont, Missouri, and three months later, aided by Commodore Andrew H.
Foote, he captured Fort Donelson and Fort Henry.
On July 4, 1863, after a siege lasting months, Confederate General John C. Pemberton surrendered his 30,000 men to Grant.
The same day, the Union victory at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, brought great joy to the North. There are subsequent volumes for reunions of the Grant Family Association, but I cannot locate any that are digitized.
Brief listing of children and grandchildren of U.
S. and Julia Grant.
The Descendants of the Presidents of the United States, by Walter Lewis Zorn. At the age of one, his family moved to Georgetown, Brown, Ohio, where Grant lived until he was 17 years old.