Elliott Warren Rice (
November 16,
1835 –
June 22,
1887) was a general in the
Union Army during the
American Civil War. He commanded an
infantry brigade during the pivotal
Atlanta Campaign in the summer of 1864.
Early life
Rice was born in
Allegany,
Pennsylvania. His family moved to
Belmont, Ohio, when Rice was an infant. He was schooled in
Wheeling, West Virginia (then Virginia), and
Franklin College in
Athens, Ohio. In 1855, he moved to
Oskaloosa,
Iowa, to study law under his brother,
Samuel Allen Rice, and graduated from the
University of Albany Law School in 1858. He practiced law in Oskaloosa with Samuel until the Civil War broke out.
Civil War
On
July 24,
1861, he joined the
7th Iowa Volunteer Infantry Regiment as a corporal. He was promoted to major on
August 30,
1861. He fought at the
Battle of Belmont in November, and became regimental commander when his superiors became incapacited. There he received the first of seven war wounds. He participated in the campaigns to capture
Fort Henry and
Fort Donelson and in the
Battle of Shiloh, when he was promoted to colonel. He fought in the
Battle of Corinth (October 1862) and commanded
Bethel and
La Grange, Tennessee, leading the 1st Brigade, 2nd Division,
XVI Corps and protected
Memphis & Charleston Railroad.
As a brigade commander in the Atlanta Campaign in 1864, he fought at Resaca, New Hope Church, and Kennesaw Mountain, Georgia. He received promotion to Brigadier General of Volunteers on June 22, 1864, leading the 2nd Division. He participated in the Siege of Atlanta, and then transferred to the XV Corps, were he served through the March to the Sea and the Carolinas Campaign. He was appointed to the brevet rank of major general for war service dating from March 13, 1865.
Post war
After the war he practiced law in
Washington D.C., until returning to Iowa, to his sister's home in
Sioux City, where he remained until his death. He is interred at Floyd Cemetery,
Sioux City,
Woodbury County,
Iowa.
References