Historical records matching Brig. General Davis Tillson (USA)
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About Brig. General Davis Tillson (USA)
Davis Tillson
Tillson was born 14 April 1830 in Rockland, Maine. He entered the United States Military Academy at West Point in 1849 but was forced to resign before graduating due to a foot injury. The injury eventually led to the foot being amputated. He was elected to the Maine legislature in 1857 and in 1858 was named adjutant-general of the state. He supported the campaign of Abraham Lincoln and following the inauguration was appointed collector of customs of Maine's Waldoboro district. He resigned this position to join the 2nd Battery 1st Maine Mounted Light Artillery in which he was made a captain when the battery mustered in 20 November 1861.
Due to the Trent Affair, the 1st Maine remained in Augusta and Portland to counter any possible action from the British until 2 April 1862 when the 2nd battery was ordered to Washington where it was attached to the 2nd brigade of Irvin McDowell's 2nd division in the Army of the Rappahannock. Tillson was promoted to major on 22 May 1862. He was chief of artillery in Edward O C Ord's division assigned to the Washington defenses.
At Cedar Mountain on 9 August 1862, Tillson commanded the artillery in McDowell's III Corps having been assigned as chief of artillery. Tillson continued as chief of artillery during the three day artillery fight at Rappahannock Station and at the Second Battle of Bull Run. He was promoted to lieutenant colonel on 24 December 1862 and assigned as inspector of artillery. He was promoted to brigadier general of volunteers on 21 March 1863, to rank from 29 November 1862, and on 29 March 1863 was ordered to Cincinnati, Ohio and assigned as chief of artillery in the Department of Ohio where he was in charge of the defenses of Cincinnati and the works on the Louisville and Nashville railroad. While assigned in Ohio he raised and organized two regiments of heavy artillery. In December 1863, he was ordered to Knoxville, Tennessee, to supervise the defensive fortifications there. He also was given command of the 2nd brigade of the 4th division in the XXIII Corps which he led in several engagements with Confederate cavalry and irregulars.
While in Knoxville he applied to Ulysses S. Grant, then the overall western theater commander, for permission to raise a regiment of colored artillery to defend the city. The 1st regiment heavy artillery US Colored Troops was mustered into service on 20 February 1864 and assigned to Tillson's 2nd brigade. The 3rd North Carolina mounted infantry, also made up of colored troops, was organized in Knoxville in June 1864 with Tillson's urging and, attached to Tillson's 2nd brigade, was primarily occupied with scout and patrol duties. Tillson was given command of the District of East Tennessee in January 1865. He ended the war in command of the 4th division XXIII Corps assigned to the Department of the Cumberland. He was brevetted major general of volunteers on 13 March 1865.
When the war ended he offered his resignation, but the request was denied and he was put in charge of the Freedman's Bureau in Tennessee then Georgia. The Freedman's Bureau, more formally the Bureau of Refugees Freedmen and Abandoned Lands, was established by the US Congress in March 1865 as part of the War Department to assist newly emancipated slaves to adjust to their new lives, to deal with the numerous refuges created by the war, and to restore abandoned land and property. Tillson retired on 14 January 1867. He remained in Georgia engaged in cotton planting for a year then returned to Rockland. In 1870 he established a granite quarry on Hurricane Island in Penobscot Bay. Granite from Tillson's quarry is one of the major components of the Washington Monument. Tillson died 30 April 1895 in Rockland.
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Tillson, Davis, brigadier-general, was born in Rockland, Me., April 14, 1830. He spent two years at West Point, and then resigned because of an accident that required the amputation of his leg. In 1857 he was elected to the state legislature, in the following year was appointed adjutant- general of the state, and early in 1861 was appointed collector of customs of the Waldoboro (Maine) district. In 1861 he was commissioned captain of the 2nd Me. battery. He remained in Maine owing to the apprehension of difficulty with England on account of the "Trent" affair, till April, 1862, when he reported for duty in Washington, D. C. In the following month he was promoted major and appointed chief of artillery in Gen. Ord's division, and in August, after the battle of Cedar mountain, became chief of artillery on Gen. McDowell's staff, taking part in the action at Rappahannock station and the second battle of Bull Run. He was commissioned brigadier-general of volunteers, to date from Nov. 29, 1862, and after serving as inspector of artillery till April, 1863, he was ordered to Cincinnati as chief of artillery for fortifications in the Department of the Ohio, where he had charge of the defenses of Cincinnati and the works on the Louisville & Nashville railroad. While here he also raised two regiments of heavy artillery. In December following he was ordered to the supervision of defensive works at Knoxville, Tenn., and was assigned to the command of a brigade in the 23d corps, with which he served in several engagements during the winter of 1863-64. From Knoxville, where he constructed what were commended as the best works in the military division of the Mississippi, he was transferred to the command of the District of East Tennessee, serving there till early in 1865, when he was assigned to the 4th division, Department of the Cumberland, which he commanded till the close of the war. He was retained in the service till Dec. 1, 1866, having charge of branches of the Freedmen's bureau in Tennessee and Georgia. He was engaged as a cotton planter in Georgia for a year, then returned to his birthplace and became interested in the lime and granite business. Gen. Tillson died in Portland, Me., April 30, 1895.
Brig. General Davis Tillson (USA)'s Timeline
1830 |
April 14, 1830
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Rockland, Knox County, ME, United States
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1856 |
October 1, 1856
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Rockland, Maine, United States
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1870 |
March 27, 1870
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Rockland, Knox County, ME, United States
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1895 |
April 30, 1895
Age 65
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Rockland, Knox County, ME, United States
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Achorn Cemetery, Rockland, Knox County, ME, United States
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