Nelson D. Cole
Nelson D. Cole, was a United States army officer, businessman, and politician from Rhinebeck, New York.
Early life
Cole was born on November 18, 1833, in Rhinebeck, New York. He was raised and educated in Rhinebeck and then worked at a lumberyard in New York City.Cole also supervised the building of a sugarcane mill in Cuba.
In 1854, he moved to St. Louis, Missouri, and lived there working in a lumberyard.
Civil War
At the beginning of the American Civil War, Cole volunteered for the Union Army. He became the captain of Company A, 5th Missouri Volunteer Infantry (3 months, 1861). While in this organization, he was severely wounded at the Battle of Wilson's Creek on August 10, 1861. Cole then served as a captain in the 1st Missouri Volunteer Infantry Regiment.He commanded Battery E, 1st Missouri Light Artillery at the Siege of Vicksburg.
He was promoted to major on August 12, 1863, and to lieutenant colonel on October 4, 1863.
In 1863, Cole was promoted to colonel of the 2nd [Missouri Light Artillery Regiment].
Indian Wars
At the end of the Civil War in 1865, Cole and eight batteries of his 2nd Missouri Artillery were sent to Omaha, Nebraska. There, he assumed command of the right, or eastern, column of the Powder River Expedition, which was to be a military expedition against the Sioux and Cheyenne Indians in the Montana and Dakota Territories.Cole's column, which mainly consisted of cavalry and mounted artillery, started northwest on July 1, and crossed through present-day Nebraska and South Dakota, before reaching the [Powder River (Wyoming and Montana)|Powder River] in Montana in late August 1865. At that time, Cole's men were low on supplies, and on September 1, they began skirmishing with Indian warriors who attacked the column.
In early September, Cole began a withdrawal toward Fort Laramie, and was forced to abandon his wagons after hundreds of the columns' horses died, fighting the Powder River Battles along the way. The other columns encountered similar results, and the Powder River Expedition was deemed a failure.
On November 18, 1865, Cole was mustered out of the Union Army.
Later life
Cole moved back to St. Louis and continued in the lumber business, eventually owning a planing mill.In 1868, with his business partner, Stephen Glass, Cole opened the Cole and Glass Manufacturing Company.
Cole served on the St. Louis Board of Aldermen for six years, and was also a commissioner for the city's Lafayette Park.