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VanHManning

Van H. Manning.

Vannoy Hartrog (Van) Manning (July 26, 1839 – November 3, 1892) was a U.S. Representative from Mississippi and an officer in the Confederate Army of Northern Virginia during the American Civil War.

Early life and education[]

Born near Raleigh, North Carolina, Manning moved with his parents to Mississippi in 1841. He attended Horn Lake Male Academy in De Soto County, Mississippi.

Marriage and family[]

He married Mary Wallace of Holly Springs. Their firstborn son died in January 1861, after their move to Arkansas.

Law career[]

Manning later attended the University of Nashville in Tennessee, where he studied law. After graduation, he and Mary moved to Arkansas in 1860. He was admitted to the Arkansas bar in 1861 and commenced practice in Hamburg.

Service during the Civil War[]

In May 1861, Manning and Dr. W.H. Tebbs recruited and organized the 3rd Arkansas Infantry Regiment, drawing from soldiers recruited in Ashley, Drew, Union, Dallas and Hot Spring counties. The regiment made up a total of eleven companies, and included one company of recruits from other parts of Arkansas as well as recruits from Tennessee and Kentucky. The regiment was then marched to Vicksburg, Mississippi, where they were initially turned down for service as a part of the Confederate Army. Manning then enlisted the assistance of Arkansas politician Albert Rust, and the regiment was accepted as part of the Confederate Army, with Rust appointed as colonel, and sent to Lynchburg, Virginia for training. The 3rd Arkansas was then assigned to General Robert E. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia, after which it took part in almost every major eastern battle. Tebbs and Manning both served as captains, and subsequently Manning was promoted to colonel of the 3rd Arkansas following Rust being promoted to Brigadier General. Manning received battle wounds at the battles of Antietam (Sharpsburg), Gettysburg and The Wilderness. Manning's reputation for heroism in battle was well known, and in official reports he was recognized for his actions during the Battle of Antietam and the Battle of Gettysburg. The report from his actions at Antietam, filed by Confederate General John G. Walker, and submitted to General James Longstreet, read as follows;

"Colonel Manning, with the 46th and 48th North Carolina and 30th Virginia, not content with possession of the woods, dashed forward in gallant style, crossed the open fields beyond, driving the enemy back before him like sheep, until, arriving at a long line of strong post and rail fences, behind which heavy masses of the enemies infantry were lying, their advance was checked, and it being impossible to climb these fences under such fire, these regiments, after suffering a heavy loss, were compelled to fall back..."

"Just before the falling back of these regiments, the gallant Colonel Manning was severely wounded and was compelled to leave the field, relinquishing the command of the brigade to the next rank, Colonel E.D. Hall, of the 46th North Carolina Regiment."

"...The division suffered heavily, particularly Manning's command (Walker's Brigade), which at one time sustained almost the whole fire of the enemies right wing. Going into the engagement, as it was necessary for us to do, to support the sorely pressed divisions of Hood and Early, it was, of course, impossible to make dispositions based upon careful reconnaissance of the localities. The post and rail fences stretching across the fields lying between us and the enemies position, I regard as the fatal obstacle to complete our success on the left, and success there would be, doubtless, have changed the fate of the day. Of the existence of this obstacle none of my division had any previous knowledge, and we learned it at the expense of many valuable lives." Manning was later commended again for gallantry, during the Battle of Gettysburg, by Brigadier General Jerome B. Robertson of the Texas Brigade, to which the 3rd Arkansas had been attached. In that action, Robertson's brigade had been ordered forward to attack and secure Devil's Den. The 1st, 4th, and 5th Texas regiments, alongside the 3rd Arkansas, did so at great cost, taking heavy casualties but securing their objective. Robertson gave much of the credit for this success to Manning's leadership in the field. Manning was wounded toward the end of that engagement, after helping his regiment hold under overwhelming odds. He was later wounded for his third time and captured during the Battle of the Wilderness in Virginia in 1864. Manning was held as a prisoner of war by Union forces from the time of his capture until the end of the war. When the war ended, only 144 of his 3rd Arkansas soldiers remained out of 1,353 mustered into it from the start of the war.

Entry into politics[]

After the war, Manning resumed the practice of law in Holly Springs, Mississippi. After the end of Reconstruction, he was elected as a Democrat to the Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, and Forty-seventh Congresses, serving from March 4, 1877–March 3, 1883. He resumed the practice of law in Washington, D.C., in 1883. In 1884 he presented credentials as a Member-elect to the Forty-eighth Congress but did not qualify. On June 25, 1884, the seat was awarded to James R. Chalmers of Mississippi, who had contested his election. Manning returned to his law practice for his remaining years. He died in Branchville, Maryland, and was interred in Glenwood Cemetery in Washington, D.C.

References[]

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