![]() For his role in delivering the White House to Rutherford B. ![]() During the disputed election of 1876, the Republican Party sent Wallace to oversee the original Florida recount. A lawyer by training, he served on the tribunal that tried the Lincoln assassination conspirators and presided over the one that convicted Henry Wirz, the commandant of the notorious prison camp at Andersonville, Ga., and the only Confederate executed for war crimes. Wallace had a Zelig-like knack for insinuating himself into the defining moments of his day. Few men participated so completely in the postbellum American experience. Yet Wallace’s unlikely journey from disgraced general to celebrated author is as thrilling as any story of his era, and his fame in his own lifetime surpassed that of all but a handful of his comrades in arms. ![]()
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