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      The Samuel Culbertson Mansion
Louisville's Most Historic Inn

1432 South Third Street
Louisville, Kentucky 40208
502.634.3100;  866.522.5078 toll free
inn@culbertsonmansion.com

 

From the St. Louis Republic, December 20, 1899

Reports on the death of General Lawton in the Philippines

LAWTON FALLS IN BATTLE

Killed While Directing
An Assault On San
Mateo, Luzon.

____________

MARCHED ALL NIGHT.
____________

Made a Successful Attack
on Insurgents
Yesterday Morning
____________

THEN HE WAS SHOT.
____________

Died as Cheers of Troops
Announced the
Victory.

____________

Manila' Dec. 19.--Major General Henry W. Lawton has been shot and killed at San Mateo. He was standing in front of his troops, was shot in the breast and died immediately.

General Lawton left here Monday night, having returned from his northern operations Saturday. to lead an expedition through Mariquina Valley, which has been an insurgent stronghold throughout the war. The valley has several times been invaded. but never held by the Americans. General Geronimo was supposed to have there the largest organized force north of Manila, and General Otis wished to garrison Mariquina.

The night was one of the worst of the season. A terrific rain had begun and is still continuing.

Accompanied by his staff and Troop I, Fourth Cavalry, General Lawton set out at 9 o'clock in advance of the main force, consisting of the Eleventh Cavalry and one battalion each of the Twentieth and Twenty-seventh Infantry, which started from La Loma at midnight. With a small escort he led the way through an almost pathless country, a distance of fifteen miles over hills and through canebrakes and deep mud, the horses climbing the rocks and sliding down the hills. Before daybreak the command had reached the head of the valley.

San Mateo was attacked at 8 o'clock, and a three hours' fight ensued. This resulted in but few casualties on the American side, apart from the death of General Lawton, but the attack was difficult because of the natural defenses of the town.

General Lawton was walking along the firing line within 300 yards of a small sharpshooters' trench, conspicuous in the big white helmet he always wore and a light yellow raincoat. He was also easily distinguishable because of his commanding stature.

The sharpshooters directed several close shots which clipped the grass near by. His staff officer called General Lawton's attention to the danger he was in,  but he only laughed. with his usual contempt for bullets.

Suddenly he exclaimed:
"I am shot!" clinched his hands in a desperate effort to stand erect, and fell into the arms of a staff officer.

Orderlies rushed across the field for surgeons, who dashed up immediately, but their efforts were useless.

The body was taken to a clump of bushes and laid on a stretcher, the familiar white helmet covering the face of the dead General.

Almost at this moment the cheers of the American troops rushing into San Mateo were mingling with the rifle volleys.

After the fight, six stalwart cavalry men forded the river to the town. carrying the litter on their shoulders, the staff preceding with the colors and a cavalry escort following.

The troops filed bareheaded through the building, where the body was laid, and many a tear fell from the eyes of men who had long followed the intrepid Lawton. The entire command was stricken with grief, as though each man had suffered a personal loss.

Owing to the condition of the country, which is impassable so far as vehicles are concerned, the remains could not be brought to Manila to-day. Mrs. Lawton and the children are living in a Government residence, formerly occupied by a Spanish General.

San Mateo lies between a high mountain behind and a broad, shallow stream in front, with wide sandbars, which the insurgent trenches and the buildings command. The Americans were compelled to ford the river under fire.

It was while they were lying in the rice fields and volleying across preparatory to passing the stream that General Lawton was shot. All except the officers were behind cover. A staff officer was wounded about the same time and one other officer and seven men were wounded.

After three hours' shooting the Filipinos were dispersed into the mountains. Colonel Lockett took command when General Lawton fell.

HAD JUST BEEN PROMOTED.

Washington, Dec. 19. -- The President's first intimation of the loss of General Lawton was given him by the Associated Press. The dispatch bringing the news was sent to the White House while the Cabinet meeting was in progress and was immediately sent to the Cabinet room, where it was received with expressions of sorrow and regret.

It was learned at the War Department that instructions had been received last night from the President to prepare General Lawton's commission as a Brigadier General in the regular army, to fill one of the existing vacancies and the Adjutant General's clerks were at work on the commission when the information of the General's death was conveyed to the department.

IN THE CIVIL WAR.

General Lawton was born in Toledo, O., and appointed to the army from Indiana. He won his commission in the army by signal gallantry during the war between the States.

General Lawton was known as a good fighter and a soldier of experience and ability. He served in the Union Army throughout the Civil War, having entered the service as Sergeant of Company E, Ninth Indiana Volunteer Infantry, in April. 1861. He was breveted Colonel for gallant and meritorious services during the war.

He entered the regular establishment in July. 1866, as Second Lieutenant of the Forty-first Infantry (negro) and remained with that branch of the army until January, 1871. In September, 1888, he was appointed Inspector General, with the rank of Major.

At the opening of the war with Spain, President McKinley appointed him Brigadier of Volunteers and assigned him to the command of a division of the Fifth Army Corps commanded by General Shafter.

AGAINST THE INDIANS.

A correspondent writing of General Lawton in the war with Geronimo said:  Lawton reminds me always of Scott's Norman Baron, Front de Boeuf. He has better morals, of course, as well as a very pretty taste in red wines and red birds. but he is as big as the giant slain by Richard of the Lion Heart, is as direct in his methods, and in personal or general combat every bit as savage. There is plenty of the primal man in him. What he thinks he says. He has a strong sense of justice, but his temper is terrific, and he is not gentle. He requires of subordinates the utmost endeavor, and gets it. He asks no one to do work that he is not competent and willing to do himself. Naturally a leader, he goes first. and the more difficult or desperate the undertaking the faster he goes. Upon the gray granite slab which covers the bones of a Confederate officer who sleeps on the magnolia-petaled uplands of Louisiana is an inscription:

"'He never told his men to go on.'
"That will do for Lawton when he dies.'
"His capacity to go without food, drink or sleep is seemingly unlimited. 'Macumazahn' the Lulus called Quartermain -- the one who has his eyes open,'
"Macumazahn Lawton will keep them open for a week at a stretch, when necessary, and then walk, talk, eat. drink or fight a dozen men to a standstill. He has lived a life of peril and hardship. His only rule of hygiene is a tub in the morning. He has taken no sort of care of himself. Yet so splendidly was he endowed by nature that there is no perceptible weakening of his forces."

The name of Lawton came to be dreaded by the Indians. He was to them the typical and dreaded Anglo-Saxon fighter.

TOWERED AMONG THEM.

A correspondent describing Lawton in the Indian war of the seventies said:

"He stood on the Government reservation at San Antonio surrounded by the tawny, savage band of Apaches whom he had hunted off their feet. Near him, taciturn but of kindly visage, stood young Chief Naches, almost as tall as he. In a tent close by lay Geronimo, the medicine man, groaning from a surplusage of fresh beef eaten raw. The squat figures of the hereditary enemies of the whites grouped about him came only to his shoulder. He towered among them, stern, powerful, dominant -- incarnation of the spirit of the white man.

"Clad in a faded, dirty fatigue jacket, a greasy flannel shirt of gray, trousers so soiled that the stripe down the leg was barely visible, broken boots and a disreputable sombrero that shaded the harsh features, burned almost to blackness, he was every inch a soldier and a man.

"For the tenth time Geronimo's band had jumped the San Carlos Reservation. As usual, troops were started upon a perilous chase. For days they followed the trail over a country that the Almighty made in wrath.  Further and further -- into the vast solitudes they toiled. They lived upon animals no wilder than the men they were pursuing and scarcely more wild than they. The horses long since had been left behind. The cavalrymen were on foot, with Lawton at their head, his teeth hard set.

"'We'll walk them down,"  he told his Sergeant, when the mountains were reached. He did walk them down.

"It was General Miles who had selected Lawton for the task of whipping these Apaches. He followed them night and day with a grim persistence that would not be gainsaid. He nullified the power of the tribe for evil and forever broke their formidable resistance. It was this service which called Lawton from the West and landed him in the Inspector General's office in Washington, with much official prestige, a fair salary and little to do."

WON AT EL CANEY.

The inaction of Washington life chafed him; and the chance of hostilities with Spain found him eagerly preferring requests for assignment to service. The opportunity was offered him. At Tampa, Lawton was the first man named by Shafter to assist him.

As Brigadier General of Volunteers he was given command of a division, and in that command stormed El Caney. In all of the fighting of that terrific day he was up to the firing line, saying little, but pacing slowly up and down.

He was one of the three commissioners appointed by General Shafter to arrange with Toral the terms of capitulation, and after the fall of Santiago he policed the city. Lawton's idea of policing a place of the kind was very simple.

"The regulations are so and so," he would say, "and you have your gun. If anybody violates the regulations use the gun."

IN THE PHILIPPINES.

General Lawton sailed for the Philippine islands on the transport Grant, January 19, 1899.

His distinguished services in the Philippines are recent history. He received a special message of thanks from President McKinley after his capture of San Isidro. On his arrival at Manila he relieved General Anderson in command of the regular troops. He captured Santa Cruz, at the extreme end of the lake, near Manila, April 10. This place which was a Filipino stronghold, fell into the hands of General Lawton's expedition after some sharp fighting, which formed one of the most interesting battles of the war. General Lawton and his staff accompanied the troops, sometimes leading charges in Indian-fighting tactics, which eventually resulted in the complete rout of the insurgents.

The General's next hard fighting took place in his attack on San Rafael, where the American troops were met with a heavy fire from a large number of insurgents, who were concealed in the jungle on all sides. Only the adoption by General Lawton of the tactics followed in Indian fighting the United States, every man for himself, saved the division from great loss. As usual, General Lawton was at the head his line with his staff. After the capture of San Isidro by General Lawton, President McKinley sent him the following dispatch:

"Otis. Manila: Convey to General Law and the gallant men of his command congratulations on the successful operations during the past month, resulting in the capture this morning of San Isidro.
"WILLIAM MCKINLEY."

DEFENSE OF MANILA.

It was announced June 1 that General Lawton had been placed in command of defense of Manila and the troops forming the line around that city. Early in October, General Lawton was engaged in dispersing the insurgents and cutting off the communication maintained by them between Bacoor and Imus, by means of the road between those places. He was successful in clearing the country of Filipinos, and was several times under fire. He then pushed northward. captured a number of towns and drove the insurgents everywhere before him.

General Lawton and General Young arrived at Arayal October 19 with a force of about 3,000 men. He next made his headquarters at Cabanatuan and took an active part in dispersing the insurgent bands in different parts of the country.

About the middle of November the whereabouts of General Lawton and Gene Young, on account of the rapidity of their movements, became almost as mysterious as that of Aguinaldo. General Lawton's troops suffered considerable hardship in a series of energetic movements. Numbers of the soldiers and even some of the officers were described as marching ahead,  half naked, their clothes being torn to shred getting through the jungles; hundreds of them were barefooted, and all of them were living on any sort of provisions. Bread was rare and native meat and bananas were the staples. The General was at Tayug on Dcember 1, his troops having captured large quantities of insurgents supplies. Later he returned to Manila, and started December 18 to capture San Mateo, where he was a and killed.

HIS OWN ACCOUNT OF HIS LIFE

REPUBLIC SPECIAL.
Fort Wayne, Ind., Dec. 19. -- The news the death of General Henry W. Laton caused great sorrow among the old soldiers of this city, where he began his career a soldier more than a quarter of a century ago. At the time of his death, General Lawton was a member of Fort Wayne Odd Fellows, and Masonic lodges and Sion S. Bass Post, G. A. R. The old soldiers had arranged to present a sword to him on behalf of Indiana citizens and a big sum of money was raised. A. S. Covell of Sion S. Bass Post wrote to General Lawton last summer and advised him of the intentions of his comrades and requested an autobiographic real sketch of his life, inasmuch as there was no authentic history of his early life. Late in September the following reply received:

"My father resided in Fort Wayne, Ind. long before I was born, he having come to Indiana at the time of the building of the Wabash and Erie Canal. I was born, however. on the 17th day of March, 1843, at Manhattan in the State of Ohio. Manhattan, now a suburb of Toledo, is the point which the canal entered Lake Erie.  Later my parents resided in Maumee City' 0., and it is there my first recollections began.  I attended the primary schools at that place, and at the age of 7 years my father to California. and I, with my mother, moved to Lorain County, Ohio.  Two years later, my father having returned from California, I went with him to the West, remaining something more than a year in Iowa and about one year in Missouri.

In 1853 my father returned to Fort Wayne, and I entered the Fort Wayne Episcopal College as a student. Since that time Fort Wayne has been my home. I remained at college until the breaking out of the war, in April. 1861, when I enlisted in a company organized by Captain W. P. Segur, which became part of the Ninth Indiana Volunteers. At the close of my term of service in that regiment, I returned to Fort Wayne and immediately re-enlisted with Captain O. D. Hurd, whose company became part of the Thirtieth Indiana Volunteers.

"At the close of the war I returned to Fort Wayne as Colonel of that regiment and entered the office of Nine & Taylor to read law. In the summer of 1866 I left this office to take a law course at Harvard University at Cambridge, Mass. I was a student at that institution when I received an appointment in the regular army, which I accepted. I was a citizen of Fort Wayne at the time of reaching my majority. I have never wavered in my allegiance to the State of Indiana and have never for a mo-

Continued on Page Two

Also, "Famous Americans Eulogize Lawton"

Related Photos 
Caisson bearing Gen. Lawton's Remains on the Luneta 
General Lawton's Remains, Paco Cemetery Chapel 

 

Lawton Links on our sites
Topics on General Lawton 
The General Lawton Photo  & Sketch Album
:
General Lawton, "Uncle Henry" to the Two Little Knights of Kentucky
General Lawton's Family
Lawton's Reception in Louisville, 1898

Death of General Lawton Dec 19, 1899 - Newspaper reports
(includes a longer biography)

Other Links:
Henry W. Lawton, Forgotten Warrior
The site above promises to soon be the most comprehensive site on General Lawton on the net
Geronimo's Surrender - Skeleton Canyon, 1886
Chronology of the Spanish American War
Assault on San Juan Hill
The Battles of San Juan Hill and El Caney
Named Campaigns - Philippine Insurrection
An American POW in the Philippines
Stereoview, General Lawton's Casket.
Arlington Cemetary web site, more biography and grave site photo
Biography of Licerio Geronimo

www.archive.org (if links are dead, you may find them archived here)

 

 

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 The Samuel Culbertson Mansion
1432 South Third Street
Louisville, Kentucky 40208
(502) 634-3100;  (866) 522-5078 toll free
Fax (502) 636-3096
inn@culbertsonmansion.com
 

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