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==Civil War==
==Civil War==


Hardway began the war as commander of an [[Alabama]] battery. It was recruited mostly in three counties, Macon, Russell and Tallapoosa. The battery was sent East, where it was mustered into the Confederate service on June 21, 1861. The battery was posted at [[Manassas, Virginia]] until March, 1862. Hardaway’s command moved to the Virginia Peninsula, where it fought at the [[Battle of Seven Pines]] in the division of MG [[D. H. Hill]]. The battery took part in the [[Seven Days Battles]]. Hill’s division remained near [[Richmond, Virginia]] until it departed to participate in the [[Maryland Campaign]]. Hardaway was commended by Confederate commanders for the conduct of his battery in the campaign. Later in the year, serving near [[Fredricksburg, Virginia]], Hardaway’s gunners, using a Whitworth gun (designed by [[Joseph Whitworth]], drove federal gunboats away from [[Port Royal, Virginia]] on December 4, 1862. Both Hill and [[Stonewall Jackson]] commended Hardaway for his actions at the [[Battle of Federicksburg]]. Shortly afterward, he was assigned command of an artillery battalion, and Captain William B. Hurt took command of the battery.
Hardway began the war as commander of an [[Alabama]] battery. It was recruited mostly in three counties, Macon, Russell and Tallapoosa. The battery was sent East, where it was mustered into the Confederate service on June 21, 1861. The battery was posted at [[Manassas, Virginia]] until March, 1862. Hardaway’s command moved to the Virginia Peninsula, where it fought at the [[Battle of Seven Pines]] in the division of MG [[D. H. Hill]]. The battery took part in the [[Seven Days Battles]]. Hill’s division remained near [[Richmond, Virginia]] until it departed to participate in the [[Maryland Campaign]]. Hardaway was commended by Confederate commanders for the conduct of his battery in the campaign. Later in the year, serving near [[Fredricksburg, Virginia]], Hardaway’s gunners, using a Whitworth gun (designed by [[Joseph Whitworth]], drove federal gunboats away from [[Port Royal, Virginia]] on December 4, 1862. Both Hill and [[Stonewall Jackson]] commended Hardaway for his actions at the [[Battle of Fedricksburg]]. Shortly afterward, he was assigned command of an artillery battalion, and Captain William B. Hurt took command of the battery.


Apparently Hardaway was promoted to the rank of major on December 2, 1862.anmd to lieutenant colonel on Feb. 27, 1864. Col [[Stapleton Crutchfield]], Jackson’s chief of artillery, objected to the promotion, claiming that Hardaway was a fine gunner but hard on both men and horses. Nonetheless, the promotion of Hardaway went through.<ref>Wise, p. 423.</ref> As a major, Hardaway became second in command of Ltc [[John J. Garnett]]’s artillery battalion, attached to the division of MG [[Robert H. Anderson]]. The battalion fought at the [[Battle of Chancellorsville]] directly under the command of Gen [[Robert E. Lee]]. General Lee had Hardaway assemble a group of rifled guns to bombard the federal camps on morning of May 4, 1863.<ref>Sears, p. 390.</ref> Hardaway became ill with dysentery, missing the [[Gettysburg Campaign]]. He returned to active duty in time for the [[Mine Run Campaign]] in the fall of 1863.
Apparently Hardaway was promoted to the rank of major on December 2, 1862.anmd to lieutenant colonel on Feb. 27, 1864. Col [[Stapleton Crutchfield]], Jackson’s chief of artillery, objected to the promotion, claiming that Hardaway was a fine gunner but hard on both men and horses. Nonetheless, the promotion of Hardaway went through.<ref>Wise, p. 423.</ref> As a major, Hardaway became second in command of Ltc [[John J. Garnett]]’s artillery battalion, attached to the division of MG [[Robert H. Anderson]]. The battalion fought at the [[Battle of Chancellorsville]] directly under the command of Gen [[Robert E. Lee]]. General Lee had Hardaway assemble a group of rifled guns to bombard the federal camps on morning of May 4, 1863.<ref>Sears, p. 390.</ref> Hardaway became ill with dysentery, missing the [[Gettysburg Campaign]]. He returned to active duty in time for the [[Mine Run Campaign]] in the fall of 1863.

Revision as of 18:28, 20 September 2009

Robert A. Hardaway commanded Confederate artillery in the American Civil War.

Pre-War

Robert Archelaus Hardaway was a native of Georgia – born there B. Feb. 2, 1829; but he was raised in Alabama. His parents were Robert Stanfield Hardaway and his second wife, Martha Bibb Jarratt. Hardaway was educated at St. Joseph's College, Alabama, and Emory College, later Emory University, in Georgia. Hardaway served with the United States Army during the Mexican War, but the war ended before he could see combat. After that war, he was the superintendent of the Mobile and Girard Railroad. He resided in Macon County, Alabama before the outbreak of war. Hardaway purchased his father’s plantation in 1857, becoming owner of its 60 slaves. On June 27 of the same year, he married Rebecca Elizabeth Hurt. They had three sons.

Civil War

Hardway began the war as commander of an Alabama battery. It was recruited mostly in three counties, Macon, Russell and Tallapoosa. The battery was sent East, where it was mustered into the Confederate service on June 21, 1861. The battery was posted at Manassas, Virginia until March, 1862. Hardaway’s command moved to the Virginia Peninsula, where it fought at the Battle of Seven Pines in the division of MG D. H. Hill. The battery took part in the Seven Days Battles. Hill’s division remained near Richmond, Virginia until it departed to participate in the Maryland Campaign. Hardaway was commended by Confederate commanders for the conduct of his battery in the campaign. Later in the year, serving near Fredricksburg, Virginia, Hardaway’s gunners, using a Whitworth gun (designed by Joseph Whitworth, drove federal gunboats away from Port Royal, Virginia on December 4, 1862. Both Hill and Stonewall Jackson commended Hardaway for his actions at the Battle of Fedricksburg. Shortly afterward, he was assigned command of an artillery battalion, and Captain William B. Hurt took command of the battery.

Apparently Hardaway was promoted to the rank of major on December 2, 1862.anmd to lieutenant colonel on Feb. 27, 1864. Col Stapleton Crutchfield, Jackson’s chief of artillery, objected to the promotion, claiming that Hardaway was a fine gunner but hard on both men and horses. Nonetheless, the promotion of Hardaway went through.[1] As a major, Hardaway became second in command of Ltc John J. Garnett’s artillery battalion, attached to the division of MG Robert H. Anderson. The battalion fought at the Battle of Chancellorsville directly under the command of Gen Robert E. Lee. General Lee had Hardaway assemble a group of rifled guns to bombard the federal camps on morning of May 4, 1863.[2] Hardaway became ill with dysentery, missing the Gettysburg Campaign. He returned to active duty in time for the Mine Run Campaign in the fall of 1863.

In the Battle of the Wilderness, Hardaway commanded his battalion in the corps of Ltg Richard S. Ewell in the portion of the artillery contingent led by Col J. Thompson Brown. The battalion continued in that corps throughout the Overland Campaign. Hardaway’s guns were in the second line of Ewell’s corps at the Battle of Spotsylvania Court House, but some of them were moved up to the line of a gorge to contain the federal breakthrough on May 11.[3] When the corps, led by Jubal Early left to defend Lynchburg, Virginia, Hardaway’s battalion remained behind. It was assigned to the defenses of Richmond, Virginia, reporting to BG Edward Porter Alexander.[4] The battalion played a role in the Battle of Chaffin's Farm and spent much of late 1864 assigned to the defenses of Chaffin's Bluff.[5]

When the corps formerly led by Ewell and Early returned to the defenses of Petersburg, Virginia with MG John Brown Gordon as its commander, Hardaway’s battalion returned to that corps. Hardaway’s gunners served under Gordon in the Appomattox Campaign, firing one of the last shots before Lee’s surrender. Hardaway was paroled on May 10, 1864.

Post War

After the war, returned to his plantation in Georgia. Then he went into railroad work, including as general manager of the East Alabama Railroad, 1869-1872. Hardway was an engineering professor at Auburn University from 1873 to 1881, and at the University of Alabama from 1882 to 1897. In between, he was an engineer for the Central Railroad in Mexico in 1881 and 1882. Hardaway died on April 27, 1899 in Columbus, Georgia.

Hardaway’s papers are at the University of North Carolina libraries as Collection Number 03006.[1]

Hardaway Hall, University of Alabama, which was completed in 1936, was named for Professor Robert A. Hardaway.[ http://tour.ua.edu/tourstops/hardaway.html]

Sources

  • Dictionary of Alabama Biography, ed. Thomas McAdory Owen and Marie Bankhead Owen, Chicago: S.J. Clarke Pub. Co., 1921, vol. 4, p. 1841.
  • A Life in Letters: Col. Robert A. Hardaway in the Civil War and the New South (Educator’s Guide to an Exhibit at the Columbus Museum)[2]
  • Sears, Stephen W., Chancellorsville, Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1996. ISBN 9780395634172
  • Wise, Jennings C., The Long Arm of Lee: the History of the Artillery of the Army of Northern Virginia, New York: Oxford University Press, 1959.
  1. ^ Wise, p. 423.
  2. ^ Sears, p. 390.
  3. ^ Wise, p. 792.
  4. ^ Battles and Leaders of the Civil War, vol. 4, p. 593; Wise, p. 917.
  5. ^ Wise, pp. 900, 919.