Major General Henry Warner Slocum
1826 or 1827-1894, Union general in the American Civil War, b. Delphi,
Onondaga co., N.Y. A West Point graduate, he resigned from the army in
1856 and practiced law in Syracuse, N.Y., until war broke out. Slocum, rising
to a major generalcy of volunteers (1862), fought in all the Eastern
campaigns through Gettysburg (1863), where he commanded the right wing.
In 1864 he led the 20th Corps at the end of General Sherman's Atlanta
campaign. His troops constituted Sherman's left wing in the march through
Georgia and the Carolinas (1864-65). After the war, Slocum settled in
Brooklyn, where he practiced law. He was a Democratic Representative in
Congress (1869-73, 1883-85).
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Fifth Edition Copyright ©1993, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Inso
Corporation. All rights reserved.