Mexican-American War In 1846, Loring joined a newly formed regiment, the
Regiment of Mounted Rifles, originally created to protect the
Oregon Territory. He was promoted to
major even before the regiment saw battle. Shortly thereafter the Mounted Rifles were sent to Mexico to fight in the
Mexican-American War. Loring's regiment saw action in most of the battles of the war and he was wounded three times. While leading the charge into
Mexico City, Loring's arm was shattered by a Mexican bullet, and he later had it amputated. He received two
brevets for bravery, one to
lieutenant colonel, and another to
colonel.
Antebellum years In 1849, during the
California gold rush, Loring was ordered to take command of the Oregon Territory and led a train of 600 mule teams 2,500 miles from Missouri to Oregon. He was in command of the Oregon Territory for two years and was then transferred to being commander of the forts of the frontier, such forts as Fort Ewell, Fort McIntosh, and Fort Union. During some five years he engaged in many skirmishes with the Indians, most notably with the
Comanches,
Apaches, and
Kiowas. Loring was promoted to colonel at the age of 38 in December 1856, the youngest in the army. He left the United States and traveled to Europe in May 1859. While there, he, like many of his fellow American officers, studied the military tactics that had been invented in the recent
Crimean War. Before he returned home, Loring would visit Great Britain, France, Sweden,
Prussia, Switzerland,
Austria-Hungary, Italy, Russia, Turkey, and Egypt.
Civil War When the
Civil War erupted, Loring sided with the South. In a conference in
New Mexico, before departing for Confederate service, Loring told his officers, "The South is my home, and I am going to throw up my commission and shall join the Southern Army, and each of you can do as you think best." He resigned from the U.S. Army on May 13, 1861. Upon offering his services to the Confederacy, Loring was promptly commissioned a
brigadier general and given command of the
Army of the Northwest, participating in the Western Virginia Campaign in the fall of 1861. His first assignment was to quickly collect and rally the shattered remnants of
Robert S. Garnett's force following its defeat at the
Battle of Rich Mountain, and drill them in preparation for the defense of western
Virginia against
Maj. Gen. George B. McClellan's invasion from
Ohio. After organizing an army of roughly 11,700 at
Monterey, Virginia, Loring detached two brigades under
Henry R. Jackson and
William B. Taliaferro to the north, to fortify Frank Mountain, and defend the approach from
Cheat Mountain. Loring moved the rest of his army, the brigades of
S.R. Anderson,
Daniel S. Donelson, and
William Gilham, south to
Huntersville. Four days after his arrival at Huntersville, Loring was joined by Colonel
Robert E. Lee, who had been sent by Richmond to western Virginia with the diplomatic role of inspecting and consulting. Loring, a Mexican War veteran who outranked Lee at the time, saw Lee as Richmond's attempt to look over his shoulder, and grew resentful of his presence. Loring and Lee moved the southern portion of their army to Valley Mountain, near
Mace, and down the
Tygart Valley to the
Battle of Cheat Mountain in September 1861. Loring soon acquired the nickname, "Old Blizzards" for his battle cry, "Give them blizzards, boys! Give them blizzards!" Following that debacle, they moved south into
Greenbrier County to reinforce the troops of the Kanawha Division under former Virginia governors
John B. Floyd and
Henry Alexander Wise, then-at
Sewell Mountain and
Meadow Bluff. Lee was re-called back to Richmond in late October. Loring and the men remained for a short period before abandoning the mountainous region too, marching into, and down the
Shenandoah Valley to join
Stonewall Jackson at
Winchester. Loring famously butted heads with superior officers, particularly with
Stonewall Jackson. At the conclusion of the
Romney Expedition in northwestern Virginia (now
West Virginia) in January 1862, Jackson returned to his headquarters in Winchester while assigning Loring to stay and occupy the small, mountainous town. Unhappy with their assignment of holding a remote outpost in the dead of winter, Loring and his officers went over Jackson's head to
Secretary of War Judah P. Benjamin, requesting that the division be withdrawn. Jackson complied with the order, then resigned in protest of Richmond's interference with his command. He withdrew his resignation at the urging of Governor
John Letcher and his commander,
Joseph E. Johnston. Loring was reassigned out of Jackson's command, and given command of the Department of Southwestern Virginia. In his five months in that role, Loring moved a force of 5,000 into the
Kanawha Valley in his
Kanawha Valley Campaign of 1862, ultimately occupying
Charleston for a six-week period. In mid-October, Loring was transferred to the West. By November 1862, Loring was in
Grenada, Mississippi, commanding a division in
John C. Pemberton's Department of Mississippi and East Louisiana, another superior officer he had friction with. In early spring of 1863, he defended against the
Yazoo Pass Expedition, before his division was ordered south to reinforce Vicksburg. He was present at Pemberton's disastrous defeat at
Champion Hill where he initially disobeyed an order from Pemberton to advance. Cut off from the rest of the army, most of his division then marched east to
Jackson, Mississippi to join forces with
Gen. Joseph E. Johnston for the impending
siege. A feud between Loring and Pemberton over these actions persisted long after the war had ended. By the end of 1863, he was under the command of
Lt. Gen. Leonidas Polk and defended east Mississippi from
William T. Sherman during the
Meridian Campaign of February 1864. Polk's relatively small force was then ordered to northwest Georgia to join Joe Johnston's Army of Tennessee, which was beginning to abandon its winter quarters in
Dalton, Georgia to start the
Atlanta campaign. Polk's divisions, one commanded by Loring, arrived just in time to temporarily thwart a flanking maneuver by Union General
James B. McPherson at the
Battle of Resaca. Facing overwhelming numbers, Johnston's army was continuously flanked and forced to withdraw closer and closer to Atlanta. Loring temporarily took command of Polk's III Corps when Polk was nearly cut in two by an artillery round and killed at
Pine Mountain on June 14, 1864. He led the corps during the
Battle of Kennesaw Mountain but was soon replaced on July 7, 1864, by Lt. Gen.
Alexander P. Stewart. Loring returned to divisional command, fighting at the
Battle of Peachtree Creek, and at
Ezra Church, where he was wounded. Loring was out of action until after the fall of
Atlanta. Upon returning he commanded his division in Stewart's corps of army now commanded by
John Bell Hood, seeing combat at
Franklin on November 30, 1864, and
Nashville in mid-December. In the last year of the war, the remnants of Hood's smashed forces returned east to participate in the
Carolinas campaign, seeing action at the
Battle of Bentonville before being surrendered by Johnston at
Durham, North Carolina a month later.
Egypt After the Confederate defeat in the Civil War, Loring served for nine years in the army of
Isma'il Pasha, the
Khedive of Egypt. He joined about fifty Union and Confederate veterans who had been recommended to the Khedive by
William Tecumseh Sherman. Loring began as Inspector General of the army, a position in which he suggested various ways to modernize the army. He was then placed in charge of the country's coastal defenses, where he oversaw the erection of numerous fortifications. In 1875, he was promised the command of an Egyptian invasion of
Abyssinia, however
Ratib Pasha was given the assignment instead, and Loring was named chief of staff. Ratib Pasha was the ex-slave of the late Said Pawshar, the viceroy of Egypt, with negligible military qualifications; according to one of Loring's American compatriots, the freedman was "shrivelled with lechery as the mummy is with age." The
Egyptian-Ethiopian War ended in disaster at the
Battle of Gura, and the Egyptians blamed the Americans for the disaster. When Ratib Pasha had urged remaining with the
Gura fortress, Loring had taunted him and called him a coward until he consented to meeting the Ethiopian host in the open valley. While the rest of the Egyptian army returned home, they were ordered to remain in
Massawa until further notice, where they endured the summer months, then spent the next two years enduring endless frustration and humiliation in Cairo. In 1878, partially due to finances, the American officers were dismissed. During his service to Egypt, Loring attained the rank of Fereek Pasha (Major General). After his return to the United States, he wrote a book about his Egyptian experiences, entitled
A Confederate Soldier in Egypt (1884). Loring was also the posthumous co-author of
The March of the Mounted Riflemen (1940). == Later life ==