Charles Devens

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Charles Devens
Charles Devens

In office
March 12, 1877 – March 4, 1881
Preceded by Alphonso Taft
Succeeded by Wayne MacVeagh

Born April 4, 1820
Charlestown, Massachusetts, USA
Died January 7, 1891
Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA
Political party Whig, Republican
Profession Lawyer, Politician

Charles Devens (April 4, 1820January 7, 1891) was an American lawyer, jurist and statesman. He also served as a general in the Union Army during the American Civil War.

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Born in Charlestown, Massachusetts, Devens graduated from Harvard College in 1838, and from the Harvard Law School in 1840. He was admitted to the bar in Franklin County, Massachusetts, where he practiced from 1841 to 1849.

In 1848, he was a Whig member of the Massachusetts Senate. From 1849 to 1853, Devens was United States Marshal for Massachusetts, in which capacity he was called upon in 1851 to remand the fugitive slave, Thomas Sims, to slavery. This he felt constrained to do, much against his personal desire; subsequently, he attempted in vain to purchase Sims' freedom, and many years later appointed him to a position in the United States Department of Justice in Washington, D.C..

Devens practiced law at Worcester, Massachusetts, from 1853 until 1861. During much of this time, he also served as a general in the state militia.

When the war erupted, Devens was initially a major in the 3rd Battalion of Massachusetts Rifles. He was appointed as colonel of the 15th Massachusetts Infantry in July 1861. He was wounded in action at the Battle of Ball's Bluff.

General Charles Devens (center) and other officers in Richmond, Virginia, April, 1865.
General Charles Devens (center) and other officers in Richmond, Virginia, April, 1865.

Devens was promoted to brigadier general of volunteers in April 1862 and assigned command of the 1st Brigade/1st Division/IV Corps. He was again wounded at the Battle of Fair Oaks in May. His brigade was not heavily involved in the Maryland Campaign. Shortly afterwards, it was reassigned to the VI Corps. Devens commanded the 2nd Brigade/3rd Division/VI Corps during the Battle of Fredericksburg.

Assigned command of a division in the XI Corps, Devens was again wounded, this time at the Battle of Chancellorsville in May 1863. He later distinguished himself at Battle of Cold Harbor, and commanded the 3rd Division/XVIII Corps in Ulysses S. Grant's Overland Campaign. During the Siege of Petersburg, he commanded the 3rd Division of the XXIV Corps.

Devens' troops were the first to occupy Richmond after its fall in April 1865.

Breveted as a major general in 1865, Devens remained in the army for a year as commander of the military district of Charleston, South Carolina, before mustering out and returning home. He later served as the fifth Commander-in-Chief of the Grand Army of the Republic from 1873–75.

He was a judge of the Massachusetts superior court, from 1867 to 1873, and was an associate justice of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court from 1873 to 1877, and again from 1881 to 1891. From 1877 to 1881, he was Attorney General of the United States in the Cabinet of President Rutherford B. Hayes.

Charles Devens died in Boston, Massachusetts, and is buried in Mount Auburn Cemetery in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Fort Devens in central Massachusetts, which opened in 1917, was named after him, as was its successor, the Census-designated place Devens, Massachusetts. A statue of him stands outside the Devens Court House.

  • Charles Devens' Orations and Addresses, with a memoir by John Codman Ropes (Boston, 1891).

Preceded by
Alphonso Taft
United States Attorney General
1877–1881
Succeeded by
Wayne MacVeagh
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