Jubal Early

Jubal Early (1816-94) was a Confederate general in the American Civil War (1861-65).  His army at one time threatened Washington, D.C., but  he suffered series of defeats during the Shenandoah Valley campaigns of late 1864 and early 1865 that contributed to the final collapse of the South and the Union's ultimate victory.

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Did You Know?

Confederate Lt. Gen. Jubal Early was popular with his troops, who affectionately referred to him as "Old Jube" or "Old Jubilee."

A West Point graduate, Early served in the Second Seminole War in Florida (1835–42) and the Mexican War (1846–48). In the period leading up to the Civil War, he strongly opposed secession, but when Virginia decided to withdraw from the Union in 1861, he felt obliged to conform to the action of his state.

As an officer in the Confederate Army of Northern Virginia, he rendered conspicuous service at the First Battle of Bull Run (July 1861), near Manassas, Va., and served throughout the Virginia campaigns of 1862–63 and at Gettysburg (July 1863). The climax of his career came in the summer of 1864 when Gen. Robert E. Lee placed him in command of all Southern forces in the strategic Shenandoah Valley. His first action was to drive the Union forces under Gen. David Hunter out of the state and to move down the valley unopposed. He then crossed the Potomac River, reaching Hagerstown and Frederick in Maryland, and defeated a small Union force at the Battle of Monocacy (July 9, 1864). Two days later he led 8,000 troops past Silver Spring and brought them into sight of Washington before withdrawing.

Northern pride was wounded by Early's threat, and Gen. Ulysses S. Grant dispatched Gen. Philip Sheridan to clear the valley once and for all. Bowing to numerically superior forces, Early suffered three decisive defeats at Sheridan's hands between September 19 and October 19—at Winchester, Fishers Hill, and Toms Brook—after which the valley was laid waste. Early then carried out a well-planned attack at Cedar Creek but was forced to retreat up the valley to Waynesboro, where he experienced the final defeat (March 2, 1865) that ended Confederate resistance in that area and opened the way to Union capture of Richmond.

After the Confederate surrender (April 1865) Early went to Mexico and then Canada, where he published A Memoir of the Last Years of the War of Independence in the Confederate States of America (1866). In 1869 he returned to Virginia, where he practiced law and wrote historical essays.

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