John
Pemberton was born in Philadelphia
on 10th August, 1814. He graduated from the U.S. Military Academy
at West Point in 1837. He joined the
United States Army and saw action in the Seminole
War and the Mexican War.
On the outbreak of the American Civil War
Johnson resigned from the US Army and on
28th April, 1861, was commissioned as a lieutenant colonel in the
Confederate Army. Pemberton was given
the task of organizing the cavalry and artillery in Virginia. On 17th
June, 1861, he was promoted to brigadier general. In February, 1862,
Pemberton was appointed major general in command of South Carolina,
Georgia and Florida. Six months later he was made lieutenant general
and given command over Mississippi and Tennessee.
In the summer of 1863 Pemberton was instructed by President Jefferson
Davis to hold Vicksburg. The
commander of Confederate forces along the Mississippi, Joseph
E. Johnston advised Pemberton to evacuate the city but was over-ruled
by Davis. Surrounded by General Ulysses S.
Grant and the Union Army, Pemberton
held out until a shortage of food and ammunition forced him to surrender
on 4th July, 1863.
Pemberton achieved his freedom when he was exchanged for Union
Army soldiers. On being exchanged, he resigned his commission
as lieutenant general and served as an ordnance inspector for the
rest of the conflict. After the American
Civil War Pemberton farmed in Warrenton, Virginia. In 1876 John
Pemberton moved to Philadelphia
where he died on 13th July, 1881.

(1) John Pemberton, letter
sent to each of his four division commanders at