Cemeteries are wonderful history lessons. Often, the larger cemeteries have scores of lessons. We could spend the rest of the year just in today’s cemetery, the Lexington Cemetery in Lexington, Kentucky. For now, we’ll concentrate on just one story, the life of Abraham Buford.
Born in Woodford
County, Kentucky, on January 18, 1820, Buford was educated by a private tutor
before attending Centre College and then West Point, where he graduated in
1841. Among his classmates were Richard B. Garnett, Robert S. Garnett, Josiah
Gorgas, John Marshall Jones, Samuel Jones, and Claudius Wistar Sears, all
Confederate generals. (There were a few Union generals in his class as well,
including Horatio G. Wright, Schuyler Hamilton, John F. Reynolds, and Nathaniel
Lyon.) After graduation, Buford was assigned to the 1st US Dragoons,
seeing duty in Kansas, Mexico (where Buford was breveted to captain for gallant
and meritorious service in the battle of Buena Vista), New Mexico, and at Carlisle,
Pennsylvania. Buford resigned from the army in 1854 and took up farming in
Woodford County. He was soon breeding racehorses and shorthorn cattle, gaining
a national reputation.
A biographical sketch states that while Buford was an ardent advocate of states’ rights, he counseled
Abraham Buford. |
against secession, and remained neutral until the summer of 1862 when he joined with John H. Morgan. Buford raised what amounted to a brigade composed of the 3rd, 5th, and 6th Kentucky Cavalry regiments. Buford led the brigade at Perryville and during the Murfreesboro campaign. Official promotion to brigadier general came on November 29, 1862. Following a dispute with one of his regimental commanders, Buford was transferred to Mississippi and placed under John Pemberton. He led his brigade at the battle of Champion Hill and served in W. W. Loring’s Division for several months, escaping the surrender at Vicksburg. In March 1864, Buford was assigned to Nathan Bedford Forrest’s command, and Buford’s infantry raided into Kentucky to supply itself with horses. Buford was assigned to command one of Forrest’s cavalry divisions.
The battle of Brice’s
Cross Roads in June 1864 is considered Buford’s finest hour, and Forrest’s
greatest victory. Buford rode with Forrest until November when his division was
attached to the Army of Tennessee. They opened the battle at Spring Hill,
fought at Murfreesboro, and Buford was wounded in the shoulder near Franklin on
December 17, and in the leg at Richland Creek on December 24. He returned to
the war in February 1865, and fought at Selma, Alabama in April 1865. Buford
was paroled at Gainesville, Alabama, on May 10, 1865.
Lexington Cemetery
Following the war,
Buford returned to Kentucky to raise racehorses, advocate reconciliation, and
serve in the Kentucky legislature in 1879. However, the death of his only son
and his wife, as well as a series of severe financial reverses that resulted in
the loss of his home, led Buford to commit suicide at his brother’s home in Danville,
Indiana, in June 1884. He was buried next to his wife in Lexington. The
Lexington Cemetery is the final resting place of a number of Confederate
generals, including John H. Morgan, John C. Breckinridge, and Basil Duke.
There is no
stand-alone biography on Abraham Buford. However, there is an excellent sketch
in Kentuckians in Gray, edited by Bruce Allardice and Lawrence Lee
Hewitt (2008)
I have visited the
Lexington Cemetery once, in the fall of 1997.
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