William Henry Talbot Walker (often styled as William H.T. or W.H.T. Walker to distinguish him from the other two William Walkers in the Confederate Army) was born in
Augusta,
Georgia in 1816. He was a son of
Freeman Walker (a U.S. Senator and Augusta mayor) and his wife Mary Garlington Creswell; however his father died in 1827 when he was ten years old. Walker then received his early education at Augusta's
Richmond Academy. He would have four children with his wife Mary Townsend, two sons and two daughters. Walker entered the
United States Military Academy at
West Point in 1832, and graduated four years later, standing 46th out of 59 cadets. Walker was appointed a
brevet second lieutenant on July 1, 1837, and assigned to the
6th U.S. Infantry. On July 31 he was promoted to the rank of second lieutenant. That winter he was serving in
Lake Okeechobee,
Florida, where he was seriously wounded on December 25 in the neck, shoulder, chest, left arm, and also his leg. Walker was appointed a brevet
first lieutenant to rank from that day as well. He was promoted to first lieutenant on February 1, 1838, and would resign his commission on October 31 of that year. Walker was reinstated in the U.S. Army as a first lieutenant on November 18, 1840, to rank from his last promotion in early 1838. He was again assigned to the 6th U.S. Infantry, and was promoted to
captain on November 7, 1845. ==Civil War service==