- CountryUS
- Town:VA Charlottesville
-
Year of creation:1921
- Rider(s):Jackson, Thomas Jonathan
(1824–1863) was one of the best-known Confederate commanders. Shot at the Battle of Chancellorsville in 1863, Jackson survived the loss of one arm from amputation, but died of complications from pneumonia eight days later. His death was a severe setback for the Confederacy, affecting not only its military prospects, but also the morale of its army and the general public.
Jackson became an icon of Southern heroism and commitment, joining Lee in the pantheon of the ‘Lost Cause’. He excelled in many battles but had a poor reputation as a horseman. One of his soldiers, Georgia volunteer William Andrews, wrote that Jackson was:
… a very ordinary looking man of medium size, his uniform badly soiled as though it had seen hard service. He wore a cap pulled down nearly to his nose and was riding a raw-boned horse that did not look much like a charger, unless it would be on hay or clover. He certainly made a poor figure on a horseback, with his stirrup leather six inches too short, putting his knees nearly level with his horse’s back, and his heels turned out with his toes sticking behind his horse’s fore shoulder. A sorry description of our most famous general, but a correct one.
Jackson rode his horse, named Little Sorrel, throughout the war. - Sculptor(s):Keck, Charles
(1875 –1951) was an American sculptor, born in New York City. He was an assistant to Augustus Saint-Gaudens from 1893 to 1898.
Three statues in Charlottesville were removed in July 2021: the statues of Robert Edward Lee, George Roger Clark and this one of Thomas Jonathan Jackson. Their fate is unknown.