Henry Case
Henry Case was a brigadier general in the American Civil War.
Early life and education
Case, son of Deacon Samuel and Sally Case, was born in Norwich, Connecticut, November 19, 1823. Case was one of the 15 founders of Delta Kappa Epsilon before graduating from Yale College in 1846.Career
After graduating, he studied law in Norwich, and began practice in Winchester, Illinois, thence removing to Middletown, Connecticut. Subsequently, he took a two-year course in the Yale Divinity School, and was ordained an evangelist at Norwich, July 31, 1855. He went immediately to Ohio, and was stated preacher, first at McConnellsville, and afterward at Cuyahoga Falls. After some years, he resumed the practice of the law.In the late Civil War, he was appointed Colonel of the 129th Illinois Volunteer Infantry Regiment, served as such for two years, and accompanied Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman on his march to the sea. He was breveted Brigadier General in March 1865. On March 16, 1865, he led troops that repulsed the Confederate brigade under Colonel A. M. Rhett in Cumberland County, North Carolina.
On the return of peace, he reopened his law office in Jacksonville, Illinois.