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John White Geary (December 30, 1819 – February 8, 1873) was an American lawyer, politician, Freemason, and a Union general in the American Civil War. He was the final alcalde and first mayor of San Francisco , a governor of the Kansas Territory , and the 16th governor of Pennsylvania .
On October 15, 1861, Union Major General Nathaniel P. Banks ordered Colonel John White Geary to cross the Potomac River from Maryland Heights, part of Elk Ridge (Maryland) and capture wheat stored by the Confederate States Army near Bolivar Heights. [1] Geary crossed the river with 600 men but sent 500 of them back that night. [1]
The first engagement on Bolivar Heights was the Battle of Bolivar Heights, which took place exactly two years after the John Brown raid, on October 16, 1861. The day before, Union Colonel John White Geary crossed the Potomac River from Maryland Heights and captured wheat stored by the Confederates near Bolivar Heights. [4]
The Affair at Glenmore Farm was a small cavalry skirmish that took place October 16, 1862 in Loudoun County, Virginia between Confederate forces under First Lieutenant Frank Myers and Union forces under General John Geary during the American Civil War. The skirmish resulted in a Union victory.
Geary, John White: Brigadier general, USV (April 25, 1862) Major general, USV (January 12, 1865) Territorial Governor of Kansas (1856–1857) Governor of Pennsylvania (1867–1873) Getty, George Washington: Captain, USA Brigadier general, USV (September 25, 1862) Major general, USA (March 13, 1865) Major general, USV (August, 1864) USMA, 1840 ...
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Casas was charged with assault causing bodily injury and theft ranging from $50 to $500, according to San Antonio Express-News. The cause of death was hanging, using a bedsheet. Casas was in general population, but alone when the suicide took place. Jail or Agency: Bexar County Adult Detention Center; State: Texas; Date arrested or booked: Aug-15
Colonel John W. Geary – promoted to brigadier general April 25, 1862; Colonel Gabriel De Korponay – discharged due to illness March 26, 1863; Colonel Thomas J. Ahl – resigned March 18, 1864; Colonel John H. Flynn – commanded at the Battle of Gettysburg while still at the rank of captain