18th President of the USA.
21st cousin 7 times removed.
As a second-lieutenant he joined the army of occupation in Texas under General Zachary Taylor, was in the battles of Palo Alto and Resaca de la Palma, and was present at the capture of Monterey. Promoted captain in 1853, in 1854 he resigned his commission and settled on a farm near St. Louis, Missouri. In 1861, when the Civil War began, Grant was appointed colonel of the 21st Regiment of Illinois Infantry. In November, now brigadier- general, he fought the battle of Belmont. In February 1862 he captured Fort Henry, and soon after Fort Donelson. In April he fought a two days' battle at Shiloh. After various unsuccessful movements against Vicksburg, Grant crossed the Missisippi, April 1863, twice defeated the enemy, and drove them into Vicksburg, when he besieged. After many assaults the stronghold surrendered conditionally on July 4, 1863, with 31.600 prisoners. In October he fought at Chattanooga, and drove the enemy out of Tennessee. In March 1864 Grant, now a major-general in the regular army, was promoted lieutenant-general, and given the command of all the armies of the United States. His plan of campaign was to concentrate all the national forces into several distinct armies, which should operate simultaneously against the enemy. Sherman moving toward Atlanta, while Grant himself accompanied the army of the Potomac against Richmond. On May 4 he crossed the Rapidan, encountered General Robert E. Lee in the Wilderness, and fought a desperate three days' battle, and pursuing the offensive, he drove the enemy within the lines of Richmond. On March 29, 1865, began a week's hard fighting, after which Lee surrendered his entire army, April 9. The fall of Richmond substantially ended the war. In July 1866 Grant was appointed full general; in 1868 and 1872 he was elected president by the Republicans. Amont the events of his administration were the guaranteeing of the right of suffraqge without regard to race, colour or previous servitude, and the peaceful settlement of the 'Alabama Claims'. The proposal of a third term of presidency not having been approved, Grant became a sleeping partner in a bankinghouse. In May 1884 the house suspended, and it was discovered that two of the partners had robbed the general of all he possessed. In the hope of providing for his family, he begun his autobiography, when in 1884 a sore throat proved to be cancer at the root of the tongue. The sympathies of the nation were aroused, and in March 1885 congress restored him to his rank of general, which he had lost on accepting the presidency. He died at Mount McGregor near Saratoga, July 23.
Source: Chambers's Biographical Dictionary.