Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain
September 8, 1828 - February 24, 1914
Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain was born in Brewer, Maine,
the eldest of five children. Facing the much larger city of Bangor across the
Penobscot River, Brewer was in Chamberlain's youth a small farming and
ship-building community. Lawrence -- as his family called him -- worked
on his father's farm and, like many other promising young men of the time,
had some experience of teaching school.
Entering Bowdoin College in Brunswick in 1848, Chamberlain studied the traditional
classical curriculum and showed particular skill at languages. He joined a
"secret society," Alpha Delta Phi, and appears to have been a pious,
serious-minded youth -- he recalled, years later, visiting the Stowe family
on Federal Street in 1851 and hearing Harriet Beecher Stowe read aloud
from chapters she had just completed of Uncle Tom's Cabin. At First
Parish Church, he met Fannie Adams, the adopted daughter of the minister;
they were to marry in 1855, after a long courtship.
But first Chamberlain took his Bowdoin A. B. degree, in the Class of 1852,
and returned north for three more years of study at Bangor Theological
Seminary. Turning down the opportunity to become a minister or
missionary, he accepted a position at Bowdoin teaching rhetoric (which
combined elements of what we would now call speech with English
literature and persuasive writing) and, later, modern languages (i.e., German
and French). A good scholar, he was also an orthodox Congregationalist --
an important factor to his Bowdoin colleagues, for the College was
embroiled in the denominational quarrels of the day.
Chamberlain knew little of soldiering -- despite a short time as a boy at a
military school at Ellsworth -- but he was keenly aware that his father had
commanded troops in the bloodless Aroostook War of 1839 with Canada,
his grandfather had been locally prominent in the War of 1812, and his
great-grandfathers had participated in the Revolution. When the sectional
crisis led to civil war in 1861, Chamberlain felt a strong urge to fight to save
the union. (Although sympathetic to the plight of the slaves, he is not known
to have been an abolitionist and showed little interest, after the war, in the
cause of the freedmen.) But the college was reluctant to lose his services.
Offered a year's travel with pay in Europe in 1862 to study languages,
Chamberlain instead volunteered his military services to Maine's governor.
He was soon made lieutenant colonel of the 20th Maine Volunteer Infantry
Regiment.
His extraordinary Civil War career is much admired today, thanks to books
like John J. Pullen's The Twentieth Maine and Alice R. Trulock's biography
In the Hands of Providence, documentaries like Ken Burns's The Civil
War, and novels like Michael Shaara's The Killer Angels (which was made
into the movie Gettysburg, with Jeff Daniels portraying Chamberlain). From
Antietam in 1862 to the triumphal grand review of the armies in May of
1865, Chamberlain saw much of the war in the East, including 24 battles
and numerous skirmishes. He was wounded six times -- once, almost fatally
-- and had six horses shot from under him.
He is best remembered for two great events: the action at Little Round
Top, on the second day of Gettysburg (2 July 1863), when then-Colonel
Chamberlain and the 20th Maine held the extreme left flank of the Union
line against a fierce rebel attack, and the surrender of Lee's Army of
Northern Virginia at Appomattox, when Grant chose Chamberlain to
receive the formal surrender of weapons and colors (12 April 1865).
Always a chivalrous man, Chamberlain had his men salute the defeated
Confederates as they marched by, evidence of his admiration of their valor
and of Grant's wish to encourage the rebel armies still in the field to accept
the peace.
Brevet Major General Chamberlain returned briefly to his academic duties
at Bowdoin, but was soon elected as a popular war hero to four terms as
governor of Maine -- helping establish a century of domination of Maine
politics by the Republican Party. Chamberlain was never a member of the
inner circle of the party and was distrusted by its leading politicians, but in
his years as chief executive he helped establish the new agricultural and
technical college at Orono (eventually to grow into the University of
Maine), tried to attract investment into a state whose economy was
beginning to decline, and persuaded Scandinavian immigrants to take up
farming at New Sweden and elsewhere in Maine. He continued to live in
Brunswick, taking the train to Augusta as state business required.
Rather than go into finance or railroads like so many young Civil War
generals, former Governor Chamberlain returned to Bowdoin; he was to
spend far more of his life as an educator than as a soldier. In 1871, he was
persuaded to accept the presidency of the college at a low point in its
fortunes. Remembering the engineering skills of West Point-trained officers
and trying to adjust to a new age, Chamberlain reshaped the curriculum to
include modern scientific and engineering subjects -- a short-lived
experiment that produced at least one very famous alumnus, the polar
explorer Admiral Robert Peary, Class of 1877.
Chamberlain's wartime experience had made him accustomed to giving
orders and seeing them obeyed. This inflexibilty in his character was less
suited to civilian life, however, and led to the biggest defeat of his career --
at the hands of his students. Part of Chamberlain's reforms had included
regular military drill in uniform. At first the students were intrigued; soon,
they were openly hostile to what they saw as an attempt to change "old
Bowdoin" into a military school. Chamberlain won the "Drill Rebellion of
1874" in the short run -- he threatened to expel the students unless they
agreed to submit -- but he lost the support of the college's Governing
Boards, and drill was soon eliminated.
Throughout the 1870s and 1880s, he continued to write, teach, lecture, and
participate actively in the G.A.R. and other veterans' groups. He
represented the United States at the Paris Exposition of 1878 and wrote a
long report on education in France. His reputation for coolness and courage
was confirmed in 1880 when, as commander of the militia, he was called to
keep order in Augusta amid an angrily disputed state election. Despite
several operations, Chamberlain had never fully recovered from the wound
in his groin he had received in 1864 at Petersburg (where a minie ball had
pierced both hipbones), and in 1883 ill health led to his resignation as
Bowdoin's president. In 1893 Congress finally gave him the Medal of
Honor for gallantry at Gettysburg.
Chamberlain spent much of the final three decades of his life in business
ventures (including speculation in Florida real estate) and in writing accounts
of his battles. The Civil War to him was not the grim business of Sherman's
memoirs or the battlefield photographs, but an idealized struggle where
"manhood" -- by which he seemed to mean courage, steadfastness, and
compassion -- was put to the test and where an individual's fate was
entirely in the hands of Providence. In more private moments, he enjoyed
rusticating and sailing at his summer retreat, Domhegan, on Simpson's
Point.
In 1905 Fannie Chamberlain died. Of their five children, two had survived
to adulthood. In 1900 Chamberlain was appointed Surveyor of the Port of
Portland, where he lived until his death in 1914 at age 85.
Although never forgotten in Maine, Chamberlain largely faded from national
view for most of the 20th century. No statue of him was ever erected at
Gettysburg; few historians studied his campaigns. But amid the surge of
interest in the Civil War in the 1990s he has re-emerged as an exemplary
figure among the Union generals, the very model of the citizen-soldier.
Biography courtesy of Pejepscot Historical Society