Birth of Ulysses S. Grant

On April 27, 1822, military leader and U.S. president Ulysses S. Grant was born in Point Pleasant, Ohio. A quiet, unassuming, and keenly intelligent man, Grant rose to national prominence as the commanding officer of the Union army during the Civil War. Though trained as a soldier at West Point, Grant never aspired to a military career. Of his early cadet years he wrote: “A military life had no charms for me, and I had not the faintest idea of staying in the army even if I should be graduated, which I did not expect.”1

I shall on all subjects have a policy to recommend, but none to enforce against the will of the people. Laws are to govern all alike—those opposed as well as those who favor them. I know no method to secure the repeal of bad or obnoxious laws so effective as their stringent execution.

Ulysses S. Grant, First Inaugural Address, March 4, 1869.

President Ulysses S. Grant… ca. 1869-1885. Brady-Handy Collection. Prints & Photographs Division

Yet, he did indeed graduate from West Point in 1843 and went on to learn the practical lessons of warfare during the Mexican War, a conflict he personally opposed but fought with great bravery. When the two-year crisis concluded in 1848, Grant returned to garrison duty and wed his longtime fiancée Julia Dent, the sister of a West Point classmate. Four years into the marriage, the young couple was separated once again by duty when Grant and his regiment were transferred to the Pacific Northwest. Longing for his family and bored with his routine tasks, Grant began drinking—a habit that would haunt him for years to come. A promotion did not alleviate Grant’s woes, and in 1854 the thirty-two-year-old captain resigned his commission.

In the spring of 1861, after suffering failed farming and business ventures in Missouri and Illinois, Grant returned to the army as a colonel of the Twenty-first Illinois Volunteer Infantry Regiment. Within months, he was promoted to brigadier general and placed in charge of 20,000 Union troops. Largely through the successive victories of the troops under his command, Grant rose steadily in rank. After the Union’s November 1863 victory at Chattanooga, President Abraham Lincoln asked Congress to revive the rank of lieutenant general to honor Grant; only George Washington and Winfield Scott had previously held the esteemed rank. Grant received his commission in March 1864, just more than a year before Confederate leader Robert E. Lee surrendered to him at Appomattox, Virginia.

Just as Grant had drifted into the military, he drifted into politics. Riding the success of his Civil War triumphs, the Republican Party drafted him as candidate for president in 1868. He won that year’s election by a large electoral vote and repeated his success four years later. Inexperienced in politics, Grant selected his Cabinet without consultation, choosing several inappropriate members who would involve his administration in a series of scandals. While Grant remained uncorrupted, popular sentiment was that he failed as president.

Grant’s post-White House years were a mixture of glory and disappointment. Upon leaving office, Grant, Julia, and their youngest son departed for a worldwide tour, during which Grant was heralded as the victor of the Civil War. Years later, in 1884, the family was reduced to poverty as the result of another failed business venture. That same year, Grant was diagnosed with terminal throat cancer.

Gen. U.S. Grant Writing His Memoirs, Mount McGregor, June 27, 1885. Howe, N.Y., June 27, 1885. Prints & Photographs Division

Racing against the clock and enduring severe pain, Grant penned his personal memoirs, which he hoped would provide his family with some financial security. Published by Grant’s friend and admirer Mark Twain, the two-volume work enjoyed immediate success, eventually earning the Grant family over $400,000. Grant completed the text just days before his death on July 23, 1885, at Mount McGregor, New York. Grant’s memoir, Personal Memoirs of U.S. Grant, is widely considered the finest military autobiography ever written.

Grant’s Tomb & Riverside Drive, New York City. Haines Photo Co, c1909. Panoramic Photographs. Prints & Photographs Division

Like Lincoln before him, Ulysses S. Grant was mourned by the nation. Walt Whitman memorialized him with a poem and the city of New York offered its public parks for the placement of his tomb. At the request of the Grant family, the Civil War hero was laid to rest in Riverside Park overlooking the Hudson River. His massive tomb took six years to build and was funded by over 90,000 donors. It was formally dedicated on April 27, 1897, what would have been Grant’s seventy-fifth birthday.

  1. Ulysses S. Grant, Personal Memoirs of U. S. Grant External. (N.Y.: Charles L. Webster & Co., 1885-86), I, 19External. (Return to text)

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Touring with the World’s Transportation Commission

On April 27, 1895, the popular periodical Harper’s Weekly carried a story on the World’s Transportation Commission visit to Ceylon, now called Sri Lanka. The article was part of an illustrated series on the Commission’s worldwide tour, with stories describing the geography, culture, and transportation systems of the countries visited.

Here and there the spire of a church or the minarets of a mosque soar above the trees, and in one place the strangely shaped tower of a Buddhist temple shows itself in the background.

Description of Colombo, capital of Ceylon[Sri Lanka], as viewed from the harbor. Harper’s Weekly, April 27, 1895.

Colombo- Clock Tower and Street Scene. William Henry Jackson, photographer, 1895. World’s Transportation Commission. Prints & Photographs Division

The World’s Transportation Commission was organized by railroad publicist Joseph Gladding Pangborn to gather information about foreign transportation systems, especially railroads, for the Field Columbian Museum in Chicago. In addition to Pangborn, the Commission included a railroad engineer, a graphic artist, and the photographer William Henry Jackson. The digital collection World’s Transportation Commission contains nearly 900 images from the Commission’s three-year odyssey.

Woman Tea Picker in Field. William Henry Jackson, photographer, 1895. World’s Transportation Commission. Prints & Photographs Division

These images were reproduced from 584 lantern slides and from 297 silver gelatin prints made from the original film negatives. Lantern slides, which are glass, positive transparencies, are the forerunner of today’s color slides. To make the lantern slides look more realistic, their creators colored them by hand with dyes and paints.

Learn More

  • To view more photographs of the tour, select Sri Lanka or another country from the Trip Itinerary, or search Today in History on World Transportation Commission.
  • Country Studies, a series of books prepared by the Federal Research Division of the Library of Congress, profiles many of the countries featured in World’s Transportation Commission. To find information on a country of your choice, select from a List of Locations, or search across the collection on a country name.
  • Search on Ceylon in The Making of AmericaExternal for articles ranging from elephant hunting to American missions in Ceylon.
  • Articles that appeared in Harper’s Weekly concerning the World’s Transportation Commission tour are not available online in the Library’s Digital Collections. However, issues of Harper’s Weekly are available in electronic databases in many libraries, such as the HathiTrust Digital Library or on microfilm. Consult a reference librarian at your local library for assistance in identifying these kinds of resources.
  • You can search online for additional materials in the Library of Congress online catalog or through other libraries’ online catalogs from around the world.