EIGHTEENTH
PRESIDENT.87
LYSSES S. GRANT, the eighteenth President of the
United States, was born on the 29th of April, 1822, of
Christian parents, in a humble home, at Point
Pleasant, on the banks of the Ohio. Shortly after his
father moved to Georgetown, Brown Co., 0. In this
remote frontier hamlet, Ulysses received a
common-school education. At the age of seventeen, in
the year 1839, he entered the Military Academy at West
Point. Here he was regarded as a solid, sensible young
man of fair abilities, and of sturdy, honest
character. He took respectable rank as a scholar. In
June, 1843, he graduated, about the middle in his
class, and was sent as lieutenant of infantry to one
of the distant military posts in the Missouri
Territory. Two years he past in these dreary
solitudes, watching the vagabond and exasperating
Indians.
The war with Mexico came. Lieut.
Grant was sent with his regiment to Corpus Christi.
His first battle was at Palo Alto. There was no chance
here for the exhibition of either skill or heroism,
nor at Resaca de la Palma, his second battle. At the
battle of Monterey, his third engagement, it is said
that he performed a signal service of daring and
skillful horsemanship. His brigade had exhausted its
ammunition. A messenger must be sent for more, along a
route exposed to the bullets of the foe. Lieut. Grant,
adopting an expedient learned of the Indians, grasped
the mane of his horse, and hanging upon one side of
the animal, ran the gauntlet in entire safety.
From Monterey he was sent, with the
fourth infantry, to aid Gen. Scott, at the siege of
Vera Cruz. In preparation for the march to the city of
Mexico, he was appointed quartermaster of his
regiment. At the battle of Molino del Rey, he was
promoted to a first lieutenancy, and was brevetted
captain at Chapultepec.
At the close of the Mexican War,
Capt. Grant returned with his regiment to New York,
and was again sent to one of the military posts on the
frontier. The discovery of gold in California causing
an immense tide of emigration to flow to the Pacific
shores, Capt. Grant was sent with a battalion to Fort
Dallas, in Oregon, for the protection of the interests
of the immigrants. Life was wearisome in those wilds.
Capt. Giant resigned his commission and returned to
the States; and having married, entered upon the
cultivation of a small farm near St. Louis, Mo. He had
but little skill as a farmer. Finding his toil not
remunerative, he turned to mercantile life, entering
into the leather business, with a younger brother, at
Galena, Ill. This was in the year 1860. As the tidings
of the rebels firing on Fort Sumpter reached the ears
of Capt. Grant in his counting-room, he said,-- "Uncle
Sam has educated me for the army; though I have served
him through one war, I do not feel that I have yet
repaid the debt. I am still ready to discharge my
obligations. I shall therefore buckle on my sword and
see Uncle Sam through this war too."
He went into the streets, raised a
company of volunteers, and led them as their captain
to Springfield, the capital of the State, where their
services were offered to Gov. Yates. The Governor,
impressed by the zeal and straightforward executive
ability of Capt. Grant, gave him a desk in his office,
to assist in the volunteer organization that was being
formed in the State in behalf of the Government. On
the 15th of