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Ludwig (also Louis) Blenker
Appleton's Blenker Louis
General Louis (Ludwig) Blenker
Born (1812-07-31)July 31, 1812
Died October 31, 1863(1863-10-31) (aged 51)
Place of birth Worms, Germany
Place of death Rockland County, New York
Allegiance Flag of Bavaria (lozengy) Bavaria
US flag 34 stars United States of America
Service/branch Bavaria RGT Flag Bavarian Army
United States Union Army
Years of service 1832 - 1837
1861 - 1863
Rank Union army brig gen rank insignia Brigadier general (USA)
Battles/wars American Civil War
Signature Appleton's Blenker Louis signature

Louis Blenker (July 31, 1812 – October 31, 1863) was a German and American soldier.

Life in Germany[]

He was born at Worms, Germany. After being trained as a goldsmith by an uncle in Kreuznach, he was sent to a polytechnical school in Munich. Against his family's wishes, he enlisted in an Uhlan regiment which accompanied Otto to Greece in 1832. Due to his gallantry, he soon became an officer. A revolt in Greece obligated him to leave, with an honorable discharge, in 1837. He studied medicine in Munich and then, at the wish of his parents, opened a wine trading business in Worms. He also married. In 1848, he became a colonel in the Worms militia. A large majority of the citizens also preferred him for mayor of Worms, but the otherwise liberal Jaup ministry failed to confirm him due to intrigues by the opposition party. This drove him into the hands of the German Revolutionary party of 1848, and when the revolution broke out in Baden, he led an insurgent corps in spite of the poor prospects. He was noted on both sides for his fearlessness. His wife accompanied him on his campaigns.[1] As commander of the Freischaren (Free Corps) took Ludwigshafen (May 10, 1849), occupied the city of Worms, and made an unsuccessful attack on Landau. When the Prussian troops entered the Electorate of the Palatinate, he fought in several of the engagements in Baden, but after the suppression of the revolution was compelled to flee with other leading revolutionaries like Germain Metternich, Ludwig Bamberger, and Franz Zitz to Switzerland, whence he emigrated to the United States.[2]

Life in the United States[]

On his arrival in the United States, he settled on a farm in New York, and ran a small business.[3] Upon the outbreak of the Civil War he organized the 8th New York Volunteer Infantry Regiment, of which he became colonel.[2] He was noted for his coverage of the retreat at Bull Run and for his performance in western Virginia at the Battle of Cross Keys.[1] For his gallantry at Bull Run he was raised to the rank of brigadier general of volunteers.[2]

But after Cross Keys a series of deficiencies plagued his command, the main accusation being carelessness with respect to supplies.[1] There were also allegations of financial irregularities. In a letter to the Illinois Staatszeitung, Gustav Struve defended Blenker on this score, i.e. with regard to a charge that he got $100 a month from each of the sutlers he had licensed to service his troops. But the charges persisted. Stories appeared in the German-language press and the New York Tribune accusing Blenker's troops of looting the countryside of edibles and theft of items of no military worth. Blenker was defended by the New Yorker Criminal Zeitung und Belletristisches Journal, and some editors suggested that Carl Schurz was planning to supersede Blenker.[3]

Also Blenker had a love of pomp. When McClellan became general of the Army of the Potomac, Blenker led a procession to his headquarters. Yet there were credible testimonials to his organizational ability, and no one questioned his courage. However, his command became notable for the quantities of foreign nobility in its ranks, the climax coming when Prince Felix Salm-Salm joined his ranks, an affront to republicans like Karl Heinzen and Struve. Struve, also a member of Blenker's corps, resigned, and Heinzen broadcast protests in his newspaper, the Pionier.[3]

The allegations reached the War Department, and when his appointment as a general reached the Senate for confirmation several senators repeated them: questionable finances, command hierarchies and distinctions more appropriate to Europe than to the United States, exploitation of his troops through the sutlers. Alexander Schimmelfennig, a fellow officer, referred to him as a “bum,” and there was much controversy between supporters of Schurz, Blenker and Franz Sigel. Blenker was ultimately confirmed as a general, but his career was ruined.[3]

Soon he was superseded by Sigel. He was mustered out of service March 31, 1863, and died in October of injuries sustained while with his command at Warrenton, Virginia,[2] leaving behind his wife, son and three daughters in dire circumstances.[1] Blenker died in poverty and there was no proof he profitted from the sutlers' trade. Some members of his staff were convicted for financial irregularities however. McClellan continued to esteem him as an officer.[3]

See also[]

Notes[]

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 ADB
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 NIE
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 Carl Wittke (1952). Refugees of Revolution: The German Forty-Eighters in America. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. pp. 233–235. http://www.archive.org/details/refugeesofrevolu008276mbp. 

References[]

  • PD-icon This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Gilman, D. C.; Thurston, H. T.; Moore, F., eds (1905). "article name needed". New International Encyclopedia (1st ed.). New York: Dodd, Mead. 

Wilhelm Wiegand (1875). "Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB)" (in de). Leipzig: Duncker & Humblot. p. 703. 

External links[]

  • Carl Schurz. New York: The McClure Company. 1907. Schurz gives an account of his meeting with Blenker in the United States in Volume Two, Chapter V, pp. 233–236. In Volume One, Chapter VII, Schurz mentions Blenker's “splendid appearance” at the head of the “considerable corps” Blenker was leading in the Baden uprising.
  • Wikisource-logo "Blenker, Louis" Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography 1900 
  • Louis Blenker at Find A Grave
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