, 1846 Worth was commissioned as a
first lieutenant in March 1813, serving as an aide to (then brigadier general)
Winfield Scott during the war, and developing a friendship with him. He later named his son Winfield Scott Worth. He distinguished himself at the battles of
Chippewa and
Lundy's Lane during the
Niagara campaign. In the latter battle, he was seriously wounded by grapeshot in the thigh. He was not expected to survive, but after a year's confinement, he emerged with the breveted rank of Major—though he would remain lame for the rest of his life. Also as a brevet Major Worth uttered his most famous words that are now inscribed in West Point's "Bugle Notes", a book of knowledge all cadets must know by heart. They are as follows: After the war he was
Commandant of Cadets at
West Point and would rise to the rank of
colonel in 1838 when he was put in command of the newly created Eighth Infantry Regiment. Using his own tactics he successfully prosecuted the
Second Seminole War in
Florida and was made a brevet
brigadier general in 1842. Eventually, he convinced
Secretary of War John C. Spencer to allow the remaining Indians in the territory to confine themselves to an unofficial reservation in southwest Florida, and declared an official end to the war in August of that year. ==Mexican–American War==