Sully, Alfred, 1821-1879
Variant namesAlfred Sully (1821-1879), army officer.
From the description of Alfred Sully papers 1816-1974. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 702127356
Alfred Sully, son of portrait artist Thomas Sully, was a United States Army officer and trained topographer residing in California from 1847 to 1853. During that time he married Manuela de la Guerra, a granddaughter of José de la Guerra. Sully left California in 1853, following the 1851 death of his young wife and child.
From the description of Church at Monterey, Calif. [graphic] / [attributed to Alfred Sully]. July 1849. (University of California, Berkeley). WorldCat record id: 227491737
Alfred Sully was born in Philadelphia on May 22, 1821. He graduated from West Point in 1841 and served in the Seminole War (1841-1842) and the Mexican-American War. He spent most of the 1840s and 1850s as a frontier Indian fighter and was posted as army quartermaster at Monterey, California, from 1849-1853. Following the outbreak of the Civil War, Sully was appointed colonel of the First Minnesota Volunteer Infantry in 1862 and engaged in the defense of Washington, D.C., and served with the Army of the Potomac during the Maryland campaign. In addition to his lifelong military career, Sully was well regarded as an artist. He died at Ft. Vancouver, Washington, on April 17, 1879.
From the description of Letters to Thomas Sully, c.1838-1862. (Huntington Library, Art Collections & Botanical Gardens). WorldCat record id: 635577681
Alfred Sully, son of Thomas Sully the portrait painter, was born in Philadelphia. He graduated from West Point in 1841 and was commissioned a 2d lieutenant in the 2d Infantry Regiment. Sully spent a year at Fort Russell in Florida fighting the Seminole Indians before being assigned to Madison Barracks, Sackett's Harbor, New York, where he stayed from 1842-46. He joined the American forces in Mexico in time to participate in the siege of Vera Cruz. In 1847 Sully was promoted to 1st lieutenant.
In 1848 the 2d Infantry Regiment was ordered to California and stationed first in Monterey and then Benicia. Sully, now quartermaster and a captain, participated in Indian campaigns in northern California and southern Oregon. He married Manuela Jimeno in 1850 and the couple had a son in 1851; however, both mother and child died that year.
From 1854 to 1861 Sully served on the northern plains where he encountered the Northern Cheyenne and Sioux. He commanded troops in the Dakota and Nebraska Territories near Fort Pierre, Fort Kearney, and Fort Ridgely, Minnesota. In 1861 Sully was ordered to Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, to recruit forces for the Union and to drive the rebels out of St. Joseph and Independence, Missouri. The following year, as colonel and later brigadier general of the 1st Minnesota Volunteers, Sully fought in the Virginia Peninsula campaign.
By 1863 Sully was back on the plains serving under General Pope. From 1863 to 1866 he commanded the "North Western Indian Expeditions" directed against the Arapaho, Sioux, and Cheyenne. The battles of White Stone Hills and Tah-kah-ha-kuty (or Killdeer Mountain) proved Sully's skill as an Indian fighter, and when the Congressional Joint Special Committee to Inquire into the Condition of the Indian Tribes, often referred to as the Doolittle committee, came west, Sully was asked to testify.
In 1866 Sully married Sophia Henrietta Webster, was mustered out of the Volunteers, and returned to the regular army with the rank of lieutenant colonel. He spent his last years serving on various special projects. He chaired a commission to investigate the Fetterman Massacre at Fort Kearney and to establish peace with the Indians of the Powder River country. In 1869 he became Superintendent of Indians for the Territory of Montana and in 1877 served briefly with General Howard in the Nez Percé war. Alfred Sully died in 1879 at Fort Vancouver, Washington Territory.
For additional information see Langdon Sully's biography of his grandfather, No Tears for the General: The Life of Alfred Sully, 1821-1879 (1974), a copy of which can be found in Box 7, folder 124.
From the guide to the Alfred Sully papers, 1816-1974, (Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library)
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Montana | |||
California | |||
Fort Berthold (N.D.) | |||
Great Plains | |||
Fort Randall (S.D.) | |||
Presidio of Monterey (Calif.) | |||
West (U.S.) | |||
Helena (Mont.) | |||
California | |||
California--Monterey | |||
Fort Ridgely (Minn.) | |||
Monterey (Calif.) | |||
Great Plains. | |||
Fort Rice (N.D.) | |||
Fort Berthold (N.D.) | |||
United States | |||
United States | |||
Fort Rice (N.D.) | |||
Fort Randall (S.D.) | |||
United States | |||
West (U.S.) | |||
California |
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Arapaho Indians |
Arikara Indians |
Atsina Indians |
Church buildings |
Crow Indians |
Dakota Indians |
Dakota Indians |
Frontier and pioneer life |
Gros Ventre Indians (Montana) |
Hidatsa Indians |
Indian agents |
Indian agents |
Indians of North America |
Indians of North America |
Indians of North America |
Mandan Indians |
Peninsula Campaign, 1862 |
Salish Indians |
Santee Indians |
Siksika Indians |
Spanish mission buildings |
Sully Expeditions, 1863-1865 |
Voyage to the Pacific coast |
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Soldiers |
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Person
Birth 1821-05-22
Death 1879-04-27