Charles W. Phifer

Charles W. Phifer
Born Tennessee
Died December 25, 1896(1896-12-25) (aged 61–62)
Savannah, Georgia
Place of burial Laurel Grove Cemetery, Savannah
Allegiance Confederate States of America Confederate States of America
Service/branch  Confederate States Army
Rank Brigadier General (CSA)
Battles/wars American Civil War
- Second Battle of Corinth

Charles W. Phifer (January 1834 – December 25, 1896) was a Confederate army officer and was unofficially appointed brigadier general.

Early life

Charles Phifer was born in Tennessee, probably Bedford County. His parents, John and Ann (Phifer) Phifer, were both descended from an old North Carolina family of German (allegedly noble Austrian) descent. The father, a planter, moved to Coffeeville, Yalobusha County, Mississippi when Phifer was young. He attended the University of Mississippi and the University of North Carolina, graduating from the latter in 1854 with honors.[1] Phifer won appointment to the U.S. army in 1855. He spent the next six years a lieutenant in the 2nd Cavalry, fighting Indians on the Texas frontier.

Military career

At war's outbreak Phifer resigned his army commission and was commissioned lieutenant in the Confederate regular army. He was a mustering officer in Louisiana in early 1861. Later in 1861 he was commissioned major of an Arkansas Cavalry Battalion, which he led in various skirmishes in Kentucky the winter of 1861-62. After this he did a brief stint on the staff of Major General Earl Van Dorn, his old army (2nd Cavalry) comrade. On May 25, 1862, Van Dorn assigned Phifer to duty as an acting brigadier general. He led a brigade of dismounted Texas Cavalry (later Ross' Texas Cavalry Brigade) at the October 1862 Second Battle of Corinth. He valiantly led the brigade in a doomed charge on the Union army entrenchments. However, he soon reported "ill" (the Texans thought he was drunk), and missed the Battle of Hatchie Bridge. Contemporary reports suggest that he was an alcoholic, "highly educated" and genial when sober, but quarrelsome when drunk. On October 16, 1862 Phifer was relieved of command and of his "acting" general's rank. He served as major and assistant adjutant general to another old army friend, Colonel Alexander W. Reynolds, during the siege of Vicksburg. Captured there, and paroled, Phifer never was offered active duty again. Late war army records list him as AWOL.

After the war, Phifer returned to Texas, living in Galveston and Austin. He married Lutie A. Marshall (1848-1917). He taught school, and worked as a civil engineer. In the 1880s he worked for Interior Department as superintendent of the Wichita tribe's Indian school (his wife taught there), but was dismissed after yet another drinking incident. Around 1890 he relocated to Savannah, Georgia, working as a part-time book canvasser. On Dec. 25, 1896, while intoxicated, he accidentally fell down the steps of the cellar of Abrams' Savannah saloon, and broke his neck. He's buried in Savannah's Laurel Grove Cemetery.[2]

References

  1. Allardice, Bruce S., "More Generals in Gray".
  2. See the Find a Grave website for a photo of the gravesite, and an image of Phifer.
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