Who’s Buried in Grant’s Tomb?

Ulysses S. Grant was born on April 27, 1822 at Point Pleasant, Ohio. Point Pleasant is a community on the Ohio River east of Cincinnati. Grant’s father Jesse, was a tanner.

Hiram Ulysses Grant – Ulysses S. Grant

Ulysses S. Grant

Ulysses S. Grant

When a young Ulysses Grant arrived at West Point, he found his appointment was in the name of “Ulysses S. Grant,” but Grant’s parents named him “Hiram Ulysses Grant.” Grant never bothered to change the clerical error to his proper name.

Perhaps Grant did not wish to have his real name initials of “HUG” adapted as a nickname for him by his fellow West Pointers. Besides, “U. S. Grant” worked better. Later, Grant was called “Unconditional Surrender Grant” after Confederate Simon Boliver Buckner surrendered Fort Donelson to him.

Ely Samuel Parker was a Seneca Indian, a Union officer, and the son of a famous Seneca chief. He studied law, but was refused admission to the bar because he was not a citizen. Later, Parker graduated from Rensselaer as an engineer. Ely Parker was working in Galena, Illinois in 1857, and he became the friend of a store clerk whose name was Sam Grant. Sam Grant was Ulysses S. Grant, and during the Civil War Ely Parker became General Grant’s military secretary. Ely Parker had exceptional penmanship, he transcribed the official copies of the surrender documents when Robert E. Lee surrendered to Grant at Appomattox Court House.

Doggone it! By lightning!

Grant never swore. His explanation for this:

“Well, somehow or another, I never learned to swear, when a boy I seemed to have an aversion to it, and when I became a man I saw the folly of it. I have always noticed, too, that swearing helps to rouse a man’s anger; and when a man flies into a passion his adversary who keeps cool always gets the better of him. In fact, I could never see the use of swearing. I think it is the case with many people who swear excessively that it is mere habit, and that they do not mean to be profane; but, to say the least, it is a great waste of time.”

In an army full of magnificent swearers, Grant’s strongest exclamations were: “doggone it” or “by lightning.”

Army Service In California

Ulysses S. Grant served with generals Zachary Taylor and Winfield Scott during the Mexican War. After the Mexican War, Ulysses S. Grant was stationed without his wife and children in California. This was very difficult time for him because Grant’s family was the center of his life. Without his wife and children near him, Ulysses S.Grant was an unhappy and sad man. Grant was lonely and bored in California and took to excessive drinking. It should be known that although Grant did drink excessively at times, never did his drinking interfere with his duties in the Civil War. The debate over whether or not Grant was an alcoholic continues to this day. We can be sure that Ulysses S. Grant loved smoking cigars. Eventually, Grant resigned his commission in 1854. The United States Secretary of War accepted Grant’s resignation, and in one of the strange quirks of Civil War history that Secretary of War was Jefferson Davis, the future president of the Confederate States of America.

President Ulysses S. Grant

After the Civil War, Ulysses S. Grant became an author, Secretary of War under President Johnson, and was elected President of the United States in 1868, he served two terms.

Personal Memoirs of U. S. Grant

Ulysses S. Grant finished his two-volume autobiography, Personal Memoirs of U. S. Grant, only days before he died of throat cancer in 1885. Mark Twain’s firm published Grant’s memoirs and 300,000 copies were sold, earning $450,000 for Grant’s widow, Julia. Grant’s autobiography is considered as one of the best autobiographies written in the English language.

So, Who’s Buried In Grant’s Tomb?

Ulysses Grant's Tomb

Ulysses Grant’s Tomb

The General Grant Memorial is located at 122nd Street and Riverside Drive in New York city. This is where both Ulysses S. Grant and his wife, Julia Dent Grant, are buried. Grant’s tomb was dedicated on April 27, 1897 (Grant’s birthday), with over one million people attending the parade and dedication ceremony.

The Sultana Disaster

The Sultana is the Deadliest Maritime Tragedy in United States History

April 27, 1865

Camp Fisk Prisoners Of War Camp

Camp Fisk, near Vicksburg, Mississippi, was a prisoner of war camp holding many Federal prisoners. On April 10, 1865 Confederate authorities sent orders to Camp Fisk for release on parole of all its prisoners. This order came the day after Confederate General Robert E. Lee surrendered the Army of Northern Virginia to General Ulysses Grant at Appomattox Court House, Virginia.

The Union prisoners of war at Camp Fisk previously were prisoners at camps such as Cahaba (Castle Morgan), near Selma, Alabama and at the hellhole known as Andersonville, in Georgia. The majority of these freed prisoners from Camp Fisk had suffered long, hard, imprisonments and the strain of existing in a Civil War prisoner of war camp had taken a toll on their health. They were weak with disease and malnourished, their release from Camp Fisk was a welcomed blessing … and a supposed lifesaver.

The Civil War was ending. The freed prisoners looked forward to shedding their old, worn, filthy war uniforms for new, and soon happily returning to their families and homes. Now on their path to freedom, the parolees would have to make a trip up the Mississippi River from Camp Fisk to Cairo, Illinois.

The Sultana Used To Transport Freed Prisoners Of War

To move these former prisoners of war up the river to Cairo, the Federal government contracted with private steamboat lines. The steamship Sultana was hired to help transport men.

The Sultana was loaded with over 2,000 parolees and other passengers as it began its voyage to Cairo. The Sultana was severely and dangerously overloaded as this steamship was designed to carry only a mere 376 passengers. There were four boilers in the Sultana and all of them required patching at one time or another. The stress of hauling this overload of human cargo proved too much for the Sultana.

Three Sultana boilers exploded about seven miles above Memphis.

The Sultana Disaster

The Sultana Disaster

What parts of the Sultana that were not immediately blown to bits by the explosion, soon caught fire. The passengers who were not killed outright in the explosion now found they were facing flames or they were thrown into the muddy currents of the Mississippi River.

The freed prisoners were weak and sick from their captivity, many of them did not know how to swim and were injured by the boiler explosions. For many of these poor men, men who had survived cruel prisoner of war captivity and treatment, their final fate was drowning in the Mississippi.

The figures vary, but 783 to 786 people were rescued from the muddy Mississippi waters. Those saved from the water were taken to Memphis hospitals. Sadly, 200 of them later died from their ordeal. Estimates are that between 1,500 and 1,700 people died because of the Sultana explosion.

The remnants of the Sultana explosion drifted down the Mississippi River, eventually sinking opposite the city of Memphis. Today, the Sultana’s remnants are buried deep in mud at the bottom of the Mississippi River.

More people died in the Sultana explosion, than died when the Titanic sank in April of 1912.