Dunbar R. Ransom

Dunbar R. Ransom (January 10, 1831—July 11, 1897) commanded Union artillery in the American Civil War.

Early life

Dunbar Ransom was born at Fayetteville, North Carolina on January 10, 1831 and raised in Vermont. He was the son of Colonel Truman B. Ransom and brother of General Thomas E. G. Ransom.[1] Ransom attended the United States Military Academy,[2] and graduated from Norwich University in 1851.[3] On June 7, 1855 Ransom was appointed as a 2nd lieutenant in the 3rd U.S. Artillery.[4] On December 31, 1856 he was promoted to the rank of 1st lieutenant and served on the West Coast of the United States. At that rank he participated in the later stages of the Yakima War in an expedition during 1858 that culminated in the Battle of Four Lakes near Spokane, Washington.[5]

War Service

Following the outbreak of war, Ransom was promoted to the rank of captain on November 1, 1861. He was assigned command of Battery L of the 3rd Artillery.[6] However, Ransom soon took command of Battery C, 5th U.S., accompanying the Pennsylvania Reserves at the Second Battle of Bull Run.[7] Ransom’s battery remained with the Reserves when they joined I Corps of the Army of the Potomac in time for the Battle of Antietam. Maj. Gen. George G. Meade, who led the division at Antietam, praised Ransom’s battery for its support of the Reserves as they advanced into and beyond the Cornfield.

Battery C supported the Reserves at the Battle of Fredericksburg, where their attack penetrated the Confederate right flank for a time. During the following year, the battery served with the second division of I Corps at the Battle of Chancellorsville.[8]

After Chancellorsville, the Union artillery was reorganized. The Reserve Artillery was grouped into brigades. Ransom’s battery joined the First Regular Brigade, and Ransom took command of the larger formation. Lt Gulian V. Weir took command of his battery.[9] The other batteries were Battery H 1st U.S. (Lt Chandler P. Eakin), Batteries F and K 3rd U.S. (Lt John G. Turnbull) and Battery C 4th U.S. (Lt Evan Thomas).[10]

At the Battle of Gettysburg, the brigade was not engaged until July 2, 1863. Eakin’s battery served on Cemetery Hill. The other batteries served on Cemetery Ridge or in advance of that ground. On July 2 the batteries of Turnbull and Thomas were advanced toward the Emmitsburg Road to support the advanced position of second division III Corps. Turnbull was posted near the Rogers House and Weir near the Codori Farm. The batteries were forced back by the attack of Richard H. Anderson’s division.[11] Ransom was wounded by a sharpshooter while leading Turbull’s battery into position. He slid from his horse as a result of this wound.[12] Weir’s battery lost three guns in the same action. In later years, brooding over this loss, Weir was driven to take his own life in 1886.[13] The batteries of Thomas, Weir, and Trumbull all served on Cemetery Ridge during the Confederate bombardment and unsuccessful assault on July 3. The First Regular artillery brigade lost 68 casualties in two days of fighting.

After Gettysburg, the battery was sent to New York City following the New York Draft Riots of July 13–16.[14] After returning to the Army of the Potomac with Battery C, Ransom was assigned to the 2nd brigade of Horse Artillery under Capt. William M. Graham. The battery served in the Bristoe Campaign and the Mine Run Campaign during the fall of 1863.[15]

When campaigning resumed in the spring of 1864, Ransom had succeeded Graham in command of the 2nd Horse Artillery Brigade. He led this formation in the Overland Campaign, including the Battle of the Wilderness and the Battle of Spotsylvania Court House.[16] Later in the campaign, all the Horse Artillery apparently was consolidated under the command of Capt. James M. Robertson. This was the situation until just before the beginning of the Siege of Petersburg, when Ransom resumed command of his brigade.[17]

In late 1864, Ransom was transferred to the Union Army of the Shenandoah, where he commanded the consolidated Batteries C, F and K of the 3rd U.S. Artillery. His battery was involved in the Battle of Berryville, but it was on detached duty at the time of the Battle of Opequon.[18] Gen Sheridan, in his Memoirs, shows Ransom present at the Battle of Cedar Creek.[19] Ransom remained in the Middle Military Division to the end of the war.[20]

During the war Ransom received brevet promotions to major (December 13, 1862), lieutenant colonel (July 3, 1863), and colonel (August 25, 1864).

Post war

Ransom remained on active duty after the war, reverting to his permanent rank of captain. In 1872 Ransom was charged with conduct unbecoming an officer for having borrowed money to facilitate travel from one military assignment to another, and resorting to deceit to avoid repaying it, and he was dismissed from the service.[21] He then undertook railroad work with the Fort Worth and Denver Railway. Later he was aided by Grenville M. Dodge, the president of the railroad, who brought the matter of Ransom's dismissal to the attention of Congress. In 1892 a Congressional investigation determined that Ransom had not been deceitful, that his Army pay had been delayed for more than a year because of his travel between posts at the time of the loan, and that he had not intentionally avoided repaying the debt. Further, Congress determined that even if Ransom had intentionally tried to avoid repaying the debt, that would have been a private matter and not professional conduct unbecoming an officer. In 1894 Congress restored Ransom to the Army’s retired list, enabling him to qualify for a pension.[22] Dunbar Ransom died at St. Joseph’s Infirmary in Fort Worth, Texas on July 11, 1897. His body was embalmed to await burial by his brother-in-law Captain James O’Hara of the 3rd U.S. Artillery.[21] He was buried in Fort Worth's Oakwood Cemetery, block 54, space 30.[23]

Notes

  1. Wyllys Cadwell Ransom, Historical Outline of the Ransom Family of America, Ann Arbor: Richmond & Backus, 1903, p. 29.
  2. Jerome Peltier, Warbonnets and Epaulets, 1971, page 356
  3. William Arba Ellis, Norwich University: Her History, Her Graduates, Her Roll of Honor, Volume 1, 1898, page 317
  4. New York Times, July 30, 1855, p. 6.
  5. H. H. Bancroft, History of California, vol. 24, pp. 465-466.
  6. General Orders of the War Department … 1861, 1862 & 1863 …, New York: Derby & Miller, 1864, p. 264.
  7. War of the Rebellion, series 1, volume 12, part 2, p. 256.
  8. War of the Rebellion, series I vol. 19 pt. 1, p. 172, vol. 21, p. 517, vol. 25 pt. 1, p. 158.
  9. War of the Rebellion, series I vol. 25 pt. 2, p. 585.
  10. War of the Rebellion, series I vol. 27 pt. 1, p. 167.
  11. Harry Pfanz, Gettysburg: the Second Day, Chapel Hill : University of North Carolina Press, 1987, p. 364 map 15-1.
  12. Pfanz, pp. 358-359. The account is different in Bradley M. Gottfried, The Artillery of Gettysburg, Nashville: Cumberland House, 2008, p. 137, where the wound is attributed to artillery fire.
  13. Pfanz, pp. 377-378.
  14. War of the Rebellion, series I vol. 29 pt. 2, p. 145.
  15. War of the Rebellion, series I vol. 21, pp. 5, 517.
  16. War of the Rebellion, series I vol. 33, p. 1049, vol. 36, pp. 116, 209.
  17. War of the Rebellion, series I vol. 40 pt. 2, p. 551, vol. 46 pt. 3, p. 1040.
  18. Personal Memoirs of P. H. Sheridan, New York: Charles L,. Webster & Co., 1888; reprint Scituate: Digital Scanning Inc., 1998, vol. 2, p. 21.
  19. Personal Memoirs of P. H. Sheridan, vol. 2, p. 79.
  20. Thomas A. Lewis, The Guns of Cedar Creek, New York : Harper & Row, 1988, p. 335.
  21. 1 2 The Daily Picayune, Friday, July 16, 1897, pg. 4.
  22. U. S. Statutes at Large, vol. 28 (1894), p. 995.
  23. Find A Grave, Dunbar Richard Ransom page, accessed September 1, 2012
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