Warren Adams

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Warren Adams
File:Lt. Colonel Warren Adams, C.S.A.jpg
Lieutenant Colonel Warren Adams, C.S.A.
Personal details
Born (1838-11-28)November 28, 1838
Minervaville, South Carolina, United States
Died November 5, 1884(1884-11-05)
Richland County, South Carolina
Resting place St. John's Congaree Episcopal Church, Congaree, South Carolina
Spouse(s) Nathalie Heyward (daughter of Nathaniel Heyward)
Relations James Hopkins Adams (father)
Joel Adams (grandfather)
Children nine children
Alma mater The Citadel, The Military College of South Carolina Class of 1859
Committees Commandant of the Corps of Cadets, The Citadel, The Military College of South Carolina
Military service
Allegiance Confederate States of America Confederate States of America 1861-1865
Service/branch Infantry, Cavalry
Rank Lieutenant Colonel
Commands First South Carolina Infantry Regiment Battery Wagner
2nd South Carolina Cavalry, C.S.A. under General Matthew Calbraith Butler

Warren Adams (November 28, 1838 – November 5, 1884) was a Lieutenant Colonel in the Confederate States Army from lower Richland County, South Carolina. He was in command of the First South Carolina Infantry Regiment at Battery Wagner, and he served under General Matthew Calbraith Butler in the 2nd South Carolina Cavalry.

Biography

Warren Adams was born in Minervaville, South Carolina, in 1838 to Governor James Hopkins Adams and Jane Margaret Scott. His great-grandfather is Joel Adams, planter, veteran of the American Revolution, and the patriarch of the Adams family of South Carolina. He graduated from The Citadel, The Military College of South Carolina in 1859, where he was the Commandant of the Corps of Cadets. Adams was also a French professor at The Arsenal Academy, and taught at The Hillsboro Academy in North Carolina. [1] He married Nathalie Heyward, daughter of Nathaniel Heyward, and had nine children, four of whom survived him.

During the American Civil War he served in many engagements. In 1863, he was in command of Confederate Battery Wagner, in Charleston, South Carolina where the Confederates defeated the 54th Regiment Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry under the command of Colonel Robert Gould Shaw.[2] [3] Later in the War, Adams was in the service of General Matthew Calbraith Butler in Hampton's Legion of the 2nd South Carolina Cavalry. While leading his men, he was shot from the saddle in 1865 at the Battle of Bentonville, N.C., and fell into the arms of General Matthew Calbraith Butler. He survived his wounds and went on to live out his life at Stony Hill Plantation, Kingsville, S.C.

Warren Adams is the first cousin (once removed) of Confederate Captain Robert Adams II of Richland County, South Carolina.

References

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