The records show that General Grant was not in favor of the Red River campaign in the Spring of 1864. Despite being general in chief, he gave way to President Lincoln's and Henry W. Halleck's plans on Louisiana . The campaign led by Major Genera Nathaniel Banks was lengthy and in the end had two negatives. No gains of any substance were the result. Banks lost a definitive battle at Shreveport and the campaign delayed Grant's plans for Mobile, Alabama. In order to resume the Union's seemingly momentum, he ordered Banks to abandon Texas altogether and leave only a Union garrison at the mouth of the Rio Grand River. If possible, Banks and the Union navy had Mobile as their target. As events turned out, Mobile would be safe much longer than Grant preferred.
General Grant had ordered General Thomas in Nashville in 1864 to attack the Confederates led by General John Bell Hood. When Thomas refused to advance, Grant considered replacing him with General Schofield.
The rank of lieutenant general was established by the Confederate Congress in 1862. Out of respect for George Washington, who held this high rank, the Union waited until February of 1864 to do this. Basically this rank was requested by US President Lincoln for his new general in chief, US Grant.
Ulysses S. Grant was promoted to the rank of Lieutenant General March 2, 1864 and was appointed General in Chief of the Federal Armies on the 10th of that month.
When Major General Franz Siegel had been defeated by Confederate General Breckininridge and Colonel Mosby in the Shenandoah Valley, Grant had no choice but to replace him. On May 19, 1864, Grant appointed Major General David Hunter to head the Army of the Shenandoah. Hunter was a Virginian, who had been a solid Unionist. It appeared that Grant had found the right general to insure the Union's integrity in the vital Shenandoah Valley.
General John Bell Hood lead his army North into Tennessee in 1864.
On March 9, 1864.
He was promoted to the rank of lieutenant general and general- in-chief in March of 1864.
General. He was promoted General-in-Chief of the Union armies in March 1864. He did not become President until 1869.
General Grant had ordered General Thomas in Nashville in 1864 to attack the Confederates led by General John Bell Hood. When Thomas refused to advance, Grant considered replacing him with General Schofield.
ANSWER Before his election to President he was Lieutenant General and from March 1864 Chief of Staff of the Union Army.
The rank of lieutenant general was established by the Confederate Congress in 1862. Out of respect for George Washington, who held this high rank, the Union waited until February of 1864 to do this. Basically this rank was requested by US President Lincoln for his new general in chief, US Grant.
Ulysses S. Grant was promoted to the rank of Lieutenant General March 2, 1864 and was appointed General in Chief of the Federal Armies on the 10th of that month.
The Commander in Chief was President Abraham Lincoln. The Generals in Chief were: Lieutenant - General (honorary) Winfield Scott, substituted by Major General George Brinton McClellan, substituted by Henry Wagner Halleck, substituted by Lieutenant General Ulysses Simpson Grant starting from March 9, 1864
Ulysses S. Grant was appointed General in Chief in Washington on March 9, 1864, at the presence of the President and the whole Government and promoted to the rank of Lieutenant-General.
Ulysses S. Grant - appointed General-in-Chief in March 1864.
Lieutenant Ardagh designed it in 1862 and then started to build in 1864
In the Spring of 1864, General US Grant knew he would have greater success against General Lee if Grant could damage Lee's supply lines from the Shenandoah Valley. With this in mind, he expected General Siegel to not only prevent a Confederate threat to Washington DC, but to also end the food supplies in the Shenandoah Valley that Lee was using.