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The Great Civil War, Vols. I-III, Belonging to Gen. George W

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles / Militaria Start Price:225.00 USD Estimated At:300.00 - 600.00 USD
The Great Civil War, Vols. I-III, Belonging to Gen. George W

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Auction Date:2009 Jun 24 @ 10:00 (UTC-04:00 : AST/EDT)
Location:6270 Este Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio, 45232, United States
Smith, Benjamin G. The Great Civil War: A History of the Late Rebellion with Biographical Sketches of Leading Statesmen and Distinguished Naval and Military Commanders, Etc. New York (NY): Virtue and Yorston, 1865. Vols I-III, 4to, gilt leather binding and gilt spine, 664pp, 680pp, 738pp. With the handwritten inscription From Geo. W. Morgan to Henry D. Coffinbury included on the front pastedown of each volume. Features several excellent maps and engravings of city views with tissue guards. This set once belonged to General George Washington Morgan.

Morgan (1820-1893), born in Washington, PA to a prominent family, entered Washington College, but left at the age of 16 to enlist in a military company raised by his brother, Thomas Jefferson Morgan, and to serve in the war for Texan independence from Mexico. By the age of 18, Morgan was a captain commanding the post at Galveston.

In 1839, Morgan returned to Pennsylvania. He entered the United States Military Academy in 1841, but resigned during his second year there. He then studied law and practiced at Mt. Vernon, Ohio until the beginning of the Mexican war. In that conflict, Morgan was first appointed Colonel of the 2nd Ohio Volunteer Infantry, then Colonel of the 15th U.S. Infantry. As a result of his participation in the battles of Contreras and Churubusco, where he was severely wounded, Morgan was breveted brigadier general. He was appointed United States consul at Marseilles, France, 1856-1858, and minister to Portugal, 1858-1861.

At the outbreak of the Civil War, Morgan returned to the U.S. and was appointed brigadier general in the Union Army, November 12, 1861, under General Buell. In March, 1862, Morgan assumed command of the 7th Division of the Army of the Ohio. He was ordered to occupy and drive the Confederates from the Cumberland Gap, and he accomplished this feat in June of 1862. In 1863, Morgan commanded a division in the Vicksburg, Mississippi campaign under General Sherman. He also served under General McClernand at the capture of Fort Hindman, Arkansas, January 11, 1863. On June 8, 1863, Morgan resigned as a result of illness and his dissatisfaction with the use of black troops.

After returning to civilian life in Ohio, Morgan was an unsuccessful candidate for the Governor in 1865. He did serve as an Ohio Congressman between 1867-1869 and 1871-1873. Morgan died at Old Point Comfort, VA, July 26, 1893 [Dictionary of American Biography, 1934, 170-171].

Morgan then presented the set to Henry D. Coffinberry (1841-1912), a prominent American industrialist from Cleveland, Ohio. After serving in the Navy during the Civil War on the ironclad gunboat Louisville, Coffinberry returned to civilian life in Cleveland where he met Robert Wallace. Together, the two men founded the Globe Iron Works / Globe Shipbuilding Company. He was also one of the founders of the Cleveland Shipbuilding Company and the Ship Owner's Dry Dock Co., which eventually came to be known as the American Ship Building Company. Coffinberry is considered one of the founding fathers of modern Great Lakes shipping. 

Condition: Excellent.