Francis P. Blair, Jr. Award


Francis Preston Blair, Jr. was born in Lexington, Kentucky on February 19, 1821. From secession to reconstruction, Frank Blair of Missouri made an unbroken series of major contributions to the Union cause. No man did more to block Missouri’s move to the Confederacy in 1861. As a U.S. Congressman, he battled for President Lincoln’s early war programs. As a soldier, he was a distinguished divisional and corps commander during the Vicksburg and Atlanta campaigns. Finally, as a post-war senator, he confronted radical Republicans in an attempt to bring reconciliation to a shattered union.

Blair was the son of an advisor to presidents and the brother of Montgomery Blair, President Abraham Lincoln’s first postmaster general. He attended the College of New Jersey, was granted a Law degree from Transylvania College in Kentucky and served briefly as attorney general of the New Mexico Territory in 1847. There, he first clashed with military governor Sterling Price, who was to be one of Blair’s major foes in the fight for Missouri loyalty. As a Missouri congressman in May 1861, Blair teamed with Brigadier General Nathaniel Lyon to wrest the St. Louis Arsenal from Confederate hands in the Camp Jackson affair.

Blair recruited seven regiments during the summer of 1862 and was commissioned a brigadier general on August 7, 1862. By November of that year, he was a major general leading a division in the Yazoo Expedition and earning plaudits from Major General William T. Sherman for his leadership at Chickasaw Bluffs early in the Vicksburg Campaign. Blair was commanding the Union line north of Vicksburg when Lieutenant General John C. Pemberton surrendered the city to Major General Ulysses S. Grant on July 4, 1863. At the Battle of Chattanooga, he led the XV Corps, and during Sherman's drive toward Atlanta, Blair commanded the XVII Corps in bloody fighting. After the fall of Atlanta, Blair led his corps on the ”March to the Sea“. He was in Goldsboro, North Carolina when word came that General Robert E. Lee had surrendered.

Both Grant and Sherman, highly critical of most ”political“ generals, rated Blair as one of the more competent military leaders of the war. Blair became the Democratic nominee for vice president in 1868 and was appointed to the senate in 1871 to fill a vacant seat. Blair died in St. Louis on July 9, 1875.

Type of Award

  • Engraved plaque (type to be determined)

Process

Camp Commanders submit nomination letters to a member of the Awards Committee by 20 May each year to cover activities for the period 15 May to 15 May of the following year. These letters must contain a chronological synopsis of specific contributions. The Awards Committee reviews all submittals and each member, including the Chairman, casts their vote. The name of the winner, along with nomination material, shall then be submitted to the Department Commander for approval.


Award Winners
 
2009:   Robert J. Schmidt, McCormick Camp #215
2008:   Robert Petrovic, Grant Camp #68
2007:   Chris Warren, McCormick Camp #215
2006:   Walter E. Busch, Grant Camp #68
2005:   Mark Coplin, Grant Camp #68
2004:   Gary Scheel, Grant Camp #68
2003:   Brian V. Smarker, Westport Camp #64
2002:   Mark L. Trout, Grant Camp #68