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From THE POINTER File: Leonidas Polk
official publication of the cadets
at West Point. June 2, 1961

{illustration of a draped Confederate flag with a bible, a cross, and a flat-topped & flat-brimmed hat of the type associated with ministers arranged atop the draped fabric on the left and a sabre, a Cavalry hat with plume arranged on the right}

BISHOP-GENERAL OF THE CONFEDERACY

history By E. T. LECHNER

the rousing tale of leonidas polk, the minister-in-arms, in
the story which took first place in the 1961
association of graduates essay contest.

. . . at the landing, are thirty-thee thousand men,
Some fairly seasoned in war, but many green sticks,
Grant's Army of the Tennessee.
Down the river
Don Carlos Buell has twenty-five thousand more
In the Army of the Ohio.
Opposing these
Are Albert Sidney Johnston and Beauregard
With something like forty thousand butternut fighters
Including a martial bishop.
___

The final phrase of Benet's verse strikes a strange note.
A bishop in the battlefield? How come a clergy-
man to the blood-soaked fields of Shiloh? Who was
this figure, called by his men simply "the Bishop?" It
was he who, when the massed forces of a divided country
met at Shiloh, advanced with sword drawn to lead per-
sonally his gray-clad followers in four gallant charges
against the Federal blue. It is hard to make "Reverend"
rhyme with "General", yet the man spoken of in the verse
did that - and more. He was a leader of men in two
spheres of endeavor, both position demanding exacting
qualities of leadership. Not only did he succeed as a
soldier and as a minister, but he excelled as both. A
graduate of the United States Military Academy and an
Alexandria, Virginia seminary, his dual life included
service as Episcopal Bishop of Louisiana and Confederate
Lieutenant General. His name was Leonidas Polk.

Polk's father, a country gentleman of North Carolina,
had been an officer in the Continental Army and a battle
companion of Andrew Jackson. Leonidas determined to
follow his father's example and began his Army career as
a cadet at the Military Academy. His years at West Point
were spent under the direct eye of Superindendent
Thayer
. Young Polk was quick to experience at the Acad-
emy what new cadets have confronted for a centery and a
half. With the careful tone of reserve which was to prove
so characteristic of his later life he wrote to his father,

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