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Brigadier General Charles P. Stone was the controversial Chief of Staff to General Nathaniel Banks at Port Hudson. He was part of the Union commission appointed by Banks to negotiate the surrender of the Confederate forces on July 8, 1863. After the Civil War, Stone served as superintendent for a mining company in Virginia. He then entered the military service of the khedive of Egypt, whose chief of staff and general aide-de-camp he became, with the rank of lieutenant-general and the title of Ferik Pasha. When he returned to the United States, he worked as engineer for the Florida Ship Canal Company, then moved to New York City, where he worked as an engineer. In 1886, Stone would undertake his most important task: he was named chief engineer in charge of erecting the new Statue of Liberty in New York Harbor. When the work was finished, Stone was given the honor of serving as grand marshal during the dedication ceremonies on Oct. 28, 1886. Ironically, he caught a chill during the festivities and died on January 24, 1887, and was buried at West Point. Reply |
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