Joshua Hall Bates (March 5, 1817 – July 26, 1908) was a lawyer, politician, and Ohio militia general in service to the Union during the early part of the American Civil War. He was a leading recruiter and organizer of many of the first regiments of Ohio troops who volunteered after President Abraham Lincoln's call to arms in the spring of 1861.
James Harvey Simpson Bates born August 28, 1863[1]
Civil War service
Bates joined the Ohio state militia and became a brigadier general on April 27, 1861. He was assigned to the Department of the Sanitary Commission and served as the commander of Camp Harrison near Cincinnati. Along with two other militia generals, he helped establish Camp Dennison, a sprawling military complex north of Cincinnati. He helped organize fifteen regiments of infantry for service in the field. Believing that he was too old at age forty-four to go into combat, Bates resigned his commission as brigadier general of Ohio militia on August 27, 1861.[3]
As president of the Cincinnati Committee of Public Safety, Bates commanded a division when Cincinnati was threatened by Confederates forces in the summer of 1863. One of the earthwork fortifications in northern Kentucky which defended Cincinnati was named Bates Battery in his honor.[4]
Again returning to civilian life, Bates resumed his law practice in Cincinnati. He became a member of the Ohio State Senate in 1864[5] and served until 1866. He was again a state senator from 1876 to 1878. He was the president of the Cincinnati Bar Association from 1881 to 1882.[6]
Bates died on July 26, 1908, in Cincinnati at the age of 91. He is among several former Union Army generals who were buried in the city's Spring Grove Cemetery.[7]
^Geoffrey R. Walden. "The Defenses of Cincinnati"(PDF). The Cincinnati Civil War Round Table. Archived from the original(PDF) on September 23, 2015. Retrieved February 2, 2011.
James Barnett (1968). "Joshua Hall Bates". The Cincinnati Civil War Round Table Newsletter. Archived from the original on June 14, 2011. Retrieved February 2, 2011.