1822 April 27: "Birth of a son, later named Hiram
Ulysses Grant, to tanner, Jesse R. Grant (Jan. 23, 1794-June 29,
1873) at Point Pleasant, Clermont County, Ohio."
1823 Autumn: Grant family moved to Georgetown, Brown County,
Ohio.
1839 March 3: Ulysses appointed to United States Military
Academy at West Point.
May 29: Grant arrived at West point and discovered that the
Congressman who appointed him used his middle name first and had
used his mother's maiden name (Simpson) for a middle name. U.S.
Grant was accepted as his true name, but later Grant insisted
that his middle initial stood for nothing. His family and Ohio
friends continued to call him Ulysses, but the cadets nicknamed
him "Uncle Sam," for his initials, which was shortened
to "Sam."
1843 June: Grant graduated from West Point, ranked
twenty-first in a class of thirty-nine. He showed an interest in
mathematics and distinguished himself in horsemanship.
July 28: Grant assigned to the Fourth U.S. Infantry at Jefferson
Barracks, just outside St. Louis, Missouri.
1844 February: Met Julia Dent, sister of a West Point
roommate, at her family's farm, White Haven, near St. Louis.
1846-47 Mexican War. Grant's first time under fire was at the
Battle of Palo Alto (May 8, 1846). Grant participated in or saw
every battle of the war, except Buena Vista.
1848 August 22: Captain Grant married to Julia Grant.
1849-51 Stationed at Detroit Barracks after short stay at
Madison Barracks at Sackett's Harbor, New York, on Lake Ontario.
1850 May 30: Frederick Dent Grant born.
1851-52 Spring: Stationed at Madison Barracks.
1852 July 22: Ulysses S. Grant, Jr. born; nicknamed
"Buck" for Ohio, the "Buckeye" State, where
he was born.
September 22: Grant arrived at Fort Vancouver, Oregon (later
Washington) Territory.
1853 September 30: Orders for Grant to report to Fort
Humboldt, Ca.
1854 June 2: Grant's resignation from the army accepted by
Secretary of War, Jefferson Davis.
1854-summer of 55 Grant family lived at White Haven with
Julia's parents
1855 Summer: Grants moved to another farm on Dent estate,
Wish-Ton-Wish.
July 4: Ellen "Nellie" Grant born.
1856 Summer: Grants moved into their own home near the Dent
farm. Grant named his farm, "Hardscrabble."
November: Grant cast his only presidential ballot prior to the
time he, himself, was elected. "The reason I voted for
Buchanan was that I knew Fremont."
1858 February 6: Jessie Root Grant, Jr. born.
Spring: Grant rented out Hardscrabble farm and rented White
Haven from his father-in-law.
1858-59 Winter: Entered real estate business in St. Louis
with Harry Boggs, a cousin of Julia.
1859 August 15: Grant submitted his application for position
of County Engineer of St. Louis, but was turned down. For two
months he was a clerk in the U.S. Customs House. Lost his job
when Collector of customs died.
1860 April: Family moved to Galena, Illinois where Grant took
a clerkship at a leather goods store, owned by his father and
operated by his brothers, Orvil and Simpson. Grant rented a
house on High Street.
1861 April 18: Fort Sumter fired upon by Confederates.
April 25: Grant leaves Galena with the Jo Daviess Guard to offer
his services to Governor Yates in Springfield.
June 28: Colonel Grant and the Seventh District Regiment entered
U.S. service as the Twenty-first Illinois.
1861-65 The Civil War
1865 April 9: General Robert E. Lee surrenders the Army of
Northern Virginia to Grant at Appomattox, Virginia.
August 18: Grant honored by a large celebration in Galena and
presented the home on Bouthillier Street.
October: After touring the nation, Grant moved with his family
into a house on I Street in Washington, D.C.
1866 July 25: Congress established a new rank, general of the
armies of the U.S. (four stars), to which Grant was immediately
appointed.
1867 August 11: Grant agreed to be Secretary of War, ad
interim.
1868 January 14: Grant resigns Secretary of War position
after Congress reinstates Stanton.
May 21: Republican Convention at Chicago nominates Grant for
president and Schuyler Colfax of Indiana for vice president.
November 3: Grant elected. He won 26 of 34 states and his
electoral college majority over Democrat Horatio Seymour was 214
to 80. The popular majority was only 306,000 in a total vote of
5,715,000.
1872 June 6: Republican Convention in Philadelphia
renominated Grant on the first ballot. Henry Wilson of
Massachusetts was his running mate.
November 5: Grant reelected with an electoral college majority
of 286 to 66, and popular majority of 763,000 over Horace
Greeley.
1877 March 4: Grant retired from the White House.
May 17: The Grant family left Philadelphia on the steamship
"Indiana" for a trip around the world.
1879 September 20: Arrived in the United States at San
Francisco.
1880 June 2: Republican Convention in Chicago. The delegates
almost evenly divided between supporters of James G. Blaine and
Grant. "Dark Horse" candidate James A. Garfield was
nominated on the thirty-sixth ballot.
1881 August: Grant bought a home, a brownstone at 3 East 66th
Street, New York City.
1884 March 6: "The firm of Grant and Ward collapsed.
Ulysses Grant, Jr. had been lured by a remarkable swindler,
Ferdinand War, into a partnership supported by his father and
relatives." General Grant discovered he had nothing and
owed substantial sums.
June: Grant decided to write his memoirs.
November: "As Grant dictated to his secretary, he began to
feel pain in his throat which soon made eating almost
impossible. It was learned that this was a fatal cancer."
1885 February 27: Grant signed a contract with his friend
Mark Twain to publish his "Memoirs."
May 23: Memoirs, Volume 1 went to press.
June 16: To avoid the summer heat, the Grant family moved to a
cottage at Mount McGregor, New York, in the Adirondacks.
July 23: Grant died at the cottage at Mount McGregor.
August 8: Grant buried in a temporary tomb in Riverside Park.
December 10: Publication of the Memoirs.
1891 April 27: Ground broken for Grant's Tomb.
1897 April 27: Tomb dedicated.
1902 December 14: Julia Grant died and was buried with her
husband.
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