William Raine Peck, Plantation Owner and Civil War General -
Submitted by Richard P. Sevier
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William Raine Peck (January 31, 1818 –
January 22, 1871) was a wealthy American plantation owner, politician, and
soldier who served as a general in the Confederate Army during the American
Civil War. The final commander of the famed Louisiana Tigers, Peck was among
the largest Civil War generals, standing 6 feet, 6 inches tall and
weighing 330 pounds
Peck was born in rural Mossy Creek in Jefferson County, Tennessee. His
family relocated to Louisiana in the 1840s. As a young adult, he bought a
plantation across the Mississippi River from Vicksburg, Mississippi. He
prospered and purchased additional land and farms, and eventually became one of
the region's wealthiest citizens. He constructed a sprawling mansion, "The
Mountain," in Madison Parish not far from the village of Milliken's Bend.
Peck represented Madison Parish for several years in the Louisiana State
Legislature. A firebrand secessionist and advocate of states' rights, Peck was
a signatory to the Louisiana Ordinance of Secession in January 1861.
With the outbreak of the Civil War,
Peck, despite his wealth and political connections, enlisted as a private in
the 9th Louisiana Infantry on July 7, 1861. After training at Camp Moore in
Louisiana, Peck and his fellow soldiers in the regiment were sent to Virginia,
arriving too late for any significant participation in the First Battle of
Manassas.
On October 8, 1863, Peck was promoted
to colonel of the 9th Louisiana to succeed Leroy A. Stafford. He led the
regiment in the battles of the Wilderness, Spotsylvania, and Cold Harbor in May
and June 1864 during the Overland Campaign.
Peck often led the brigade as the
senior colonel, and his role in the July 1864 Battle of Monocacy
drew praise from his division commander, Maj. Gen. John B.
Gordon. He was wounded in the right thigh by a shell
fragment at the Third Battle of Winchester in September. He did not return to
the field until December. Peck was promoted to brigadier general on February
18, 1865. He was paroled in Vicksburg on June 6 of that year.
Following the Civil War, Peck returned to his Louisiana plantation and
resumed active management of the business. Plagued by poor health from his
military service, he died six years after the war near Milliken's Bend,
Louisiana, of congestive heart failure. He is buried in the family plot in the
Old Methodist section of Westview Cemetery in
Jefferson City, Tennessee.
From Wikipedia