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Ulysses S. Grant

Personal Profile

Ulysses S. Grant
  • Birth Name:
    Hiram Ulysses Grant
  • Nickname:
    "Unconditional Surrender"
  • Date of Birth:
    April 27, 1822
  • Zodiac Sign:
    Taurus
  • Place of Birth:
    Point Pleasant, Ohio
  • Place of Death:
    Mount McGregor, New York
  • Date of Death:
    July 23, 1885
  • Sex:
    Male
  • Nationality:
    American
  • Education:
    United States Military Academy at West Point

Family

Ulysses S. Grant
  • Father:
    Jesse Root Grant
  • Mother:
    Hannah Simpson Grant
  • Spouse:
    Julia Dent Grant
  • Son:
    Jesse Grant, Ulysses S. Grant, Jr., Nellie Grant, Frederick Grant

Career

Ulysses S. Grant

Trivia

Ulysses S. Grant
  • Grant was one of three presidents to graduate from a military academy: West Point.
  • He finished his memoirs only a few weeks before his death from cancer. The book brought in $500,000 for his family after his death.
  • While president, Ulysses S. Grant was arrested for driving his horse too fast. He was fined $20.
  • His real name was Hiram Ulysses Grant. He changed it because he didn't want to enter West Point with the initials H.U.G.
  • Grant was a fourth cousin once removed of Franklin D. Roosevelt, a sixth cousin once removed of Grover Cleveland, and a first cousin three times removed to Judy Garland.
  • Grant ate a cucumber soaked in vinegar for breakfast each day.
  • Grant was the first president to have both parents alive when he took office.
  • Witness to some of the bloodiest battles in history, Grant could not stomach the sight of animal blood rare steak nauseated him.
  • Grant used around seven to ten cigars a day. Of this 7-10, he often did not smoke them at all. A reporter wrotethat Grant liked cigars, and people started to send him cigars. He received over 20,000.
  • Ten years after he was president, Grant was stricken with throat cancer. He regularly swabbed his throat with cocaine, becoming addicted to it.

Quotes

Ulysses S. Grant
  • “Labor disgraces no man, but occasionally men disgrace labor.”
  • “Nations, like individuals, are punished for their transgressions.”
  • “Hold fast to the Bible. . . . To the influence of this Book we are indebted for all the progress made in true civilization and to this we must look as our guide in the future.”
  • “It is probably well that we had the war when we did. We are better off now than we would have been without it, and have made more rapid progress than we otherwise should have made. Now our republic has shown itself capable of dealing with one of the.”
  • “I appreciate the fact, and am proud of it, that the attentions I am receiving are intended more for our country than for me personally.”
  • “Everyone has his superstitions. One of mine has always been when I started to go anywhere, accomplished.”
  • “I see from the papers that my name has been sent in for Brigadier General. This is certainly very complimentary to me, particularly as I have never asked a friend to intercede in my behalf. Hearing that I was likely to be promoted, the officers, with.”
  • “I propose to fight it out on this line if it takes all summer.”
  • “If you see the President, tell him from me that whatever happens there will be no turning back.”
  • “I have made it a rule of my life to trust a man long after other people gave him up, but I don't see how I can ever trust any human being again.”
View all Quotes: Ulysses S. Grant

Biography

Ulysses S. Grant
Last Updated: Monday, September 28, 2009

Ulysses S. GrantLate in the administration of Andrew Johnson, Gen. Ulysses S. Grant quarreled with the President and aligned himself with the Radical Republicans. He was, as the symbol of Union victory during the Civil War, their logical candidate for President in 1868. When he was elected, the American people hoped for an end to turmoil. Grant provided neither vigor nor reform. Looking to Congress for direction, he seemed bewildered. One visitor to the White House noted "a puzzled pathos, as of a man with a problem before him of which he does not understand the terms."

Born in 1822, Grant was the son of an Ohio tanner. He went to West Point rather against his will and graduated in the middle of his class. In the Mexican War he fought under Gen. Zachary Taylor. At the outbreak of the Civil War, Grant was working in his father's leather store in Galena, Illinois. He was appointed by the Governor to command an unruly volunteer regiment. Grant whipped it into shape and by September 1861 he had risen to the rank of brigadier general of volunteers.

He sought to win control of the Mississippi Valley. In February 1862 he took Fort Henry and attacked Fort Donelson. When the Confederate commander asked for terms, Grant replied, "No terms except an unconditional and immediate surrender can be accepted." The Confederates surrendered, and President Lincoln promoted Grant to major general of volunteers.

At Shiloh in April, Grant fought one of the bloodiest battles in the West and came out less well. President Lincoln fended off demands for his removal by saying, "I can't spare this man--he fights." For his next major objective, Grant maneuvered and fought skillfully to win Vicksburg, the key city on the Mississippi, and thus cut the Confederacy in two. Then he broke the Confederate hold on Chattanooga.

Lincoln appointed him General-in-Chief in March 1864. Grant directed Sherman to drive through the South while he himself, with the Army of the Potomac, pinned down Gen. Robert E. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia. Finally, on April 9, 1865, at Appomattox Court House, Lee surrendered. Grant wrote out magnanimous terms of surrender that would prevent treason trials. As President, Grant presided over the Government much as he had run the Army. Indeed he brought part of his Army staff to the White House.

Although a man of scrupulous honesty, Grant as President accepted handsome presents from admirers. Worse, he allowed himself to be seen with two speculators, Jay Gould and James Fisk. When Grant realized their scheme to corner the market in gold, he authorized the Secretary of the Treasury to sell enough gold to wreck their plans, but the speculation had already wrought havoc with business.

During his campaign for re-election in 1872, Grant was attacked by Liberal Republican reformers. He called them "narrow-headed men," their eyes so close together that "they can look out of the same gimlet hole without winking." The General's friends in the Republican Party came to be known proudly as "the Old Guard."

Grant allowed Radical Reconstruction to run its course in the South, bolstering it at times with military force. After retiring from the Presidency, Grant became a partner in a financial firm, which went bankrupt. About that time he learned that he had cancer of the throat. He started writing his recollections to pay off his debts and provide for his family, racing against death to produce a memoir that ultimately earned nearly $450,000. Soon after completing the last page, in 1885, he died.

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