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Monday, April 27, 2026

American History Blogmanac Celebrates The Birthday Of Our 18th President Of The United States: Ulysses S. Grant

"Unconditional Surrender Grant" & "Savior of the Union"

Ulysses S. Grant entered the world quietly on April 27, 1822, the son of a tanner in a small Ohio river town. Nothing in his early life suggested the towering role he would one day play in the nation’s survival. He disliked the family trade, preferred horses to tanning vats, and showed little interest in politics or public life. Yet the boy who once seemed destined for obscurity would become the general who preserved the Union and the president who fought to secure the rights of its newly freed citizens.

Grant’s rise was neither smooth nor inevitable. After graduating from West Point with an unremarkable record, he served with distinction in the Mexican‑American War but struggled in peacetime. He resigned from the Army under a cloud, failed in several business ventures, and returned to civilian life with little to show for his efforts. When the Civil War erupted in 1861, Grant was working in his father’s leather goods store, far removed from the command he once held. But the war offered him a second chance, and he seized it with quiet determination.

By 1862, Grant had become the Union’s most aggressive and effective field commander. His victories at Fort Donelson, Shiloh, Vicksburg, and Chattanooga revealed a leader who combined relentless pressure with a deep understanding of logistics and morale. He refused to be shaken by setbacks, refused to retreat when others hesitated, and refused to let the Confederacy regroup. His famous demand for “unconditional surrender” at Fort Donelson signaled a new, uncompromising phase of the war. President Abraham Lincoln recognized in Grant a general who would fight, and in 1864 elevated him to command all Union armies.

Grant’s strategy of coordinated offensives across multiple theaters ultimately broke the Confederacy’s ability to sustain the war. His final campaign against Robert E. Lee in Virginia was brutal, grinding, and decisive. When Lee surrendered at Appomattox Court House on April 9, 1865, Grant offered generous terms, insisting that the nation needed reconciliation, not humiliation. His dignity in victory helped set the tone for the war’s end.

Elected president in 1868, Grant entered office determined to secure the rights of formerly enslaved Americans and to protect Reconstruction in the South. His administration confronted violent resistance from the Ku Klux Klan, defended Black voting rights, and supported the 15th Amendment. Though his presidency faced scandals involving subordinates, Grant himself remained personally honest, committed to national unity, and steadfast in his belief that the federal government must defend equal citizenship.

On his birthday, we remember Ulysses S. Grant not only as the general who saved the Union, but as a leader who believed deeply in justice, loyalty, and national purpose. His life reminds us that greatness often emerges from perseverance, humility, and an unwavering sense of duty. 

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