Pierre Gustave Toutant Beauregard
1818–93, Confederate general, b. St. Bernard parish, La., grad.
West Point, 1838. As engineer on the staff of Winfield Scott in the
Mexican War, he figured prominently in the taking of Mexico City.
He later did engineering work in Louisiana, and for five days in
Jan., 1861, he was superintendent of West Point. Beauregard,
resigning from the army in February, was soon made a
Confederate brigadier general and was given command at
Charleston, where he ordered the firing on Fort Sumter. Assuming
command of the army in NE Virginia (June), he was second in
command to J. E. Johnston at the first battle of Bull Run (July 16,
1861) and was promoted to full general. He was sent to the West
in 1862 and succeeded to the command of the Army of Tennessee
upon the death of A. S. Johnston at the battle of Shiloh. Ill health
and friction with Jefferson Davis, whom he had criticized after
Bull Run, resulted in his removal from command. After a rest he
was charged with the defense of the South Carolina and Georgia
coast, which he ably held against Union attacks, particularly those
on Charleston in 1863. In May, 1864, Beauregard reinforced Lee
in Virginia. He defeated B. F. Butler at Drewry's Bluff and held
Petersburg against Grant until Lee arrived. In the closing months
of the war he was in the Carolinas with J. E. Johnston. After the
war Beauregard was a railroad president, manager of the
Louisiana state lottery, and for many years adjutant general of that
state. His superior engineering abilities overshadowed his
deficiencies as a field commander.
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Fifth Edition Copyright ©1993