Lew Wallace

Lew Wallace

Lewis Wallace was born in 1827, in Brookville, Indiana, the son of David (the future governor of Indiana) and Esther Test Wallace (the daughter of Indiana's first U.S. congressman). At the age of sixteen, he left school and began work as an assistant in his father's law firm until the outbreak of the Mexican War. Though he did not see much action, Wallace joined the fighting as a second lieutenant in the First Regiment of Indiana Volunteers. During this time, he worked on his first novel. After the war, Wallace returned to the law and was admitted to the Indiana Bar. He was eventually elected to the state senate, where he served until the outbreak of the American Civil War in 1861. He then resumed soldiering and became the youngest man to hold the rank of major general of that time. Continuing in service to his country, Wallace served on the military commission responsible for trying and sentencing those involved in the assassination of President Lincoln, and aided Benito Juarez in trying to establish a constitutional government in Mexico. In 1878, Wallace became the territorial governor of New Mexico, and during his 3-year tenure there, he wrote Ben-Hur (1880). The rest of Wallace's life saw the publication of lesser literary efforts, and his appointment as minister of Turkey. He died in Crawfordsville, Indiana, in 1905.

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Lew Wallace, Boy Writer
by Martha E. Schaaf
from Patria Press, Inc.
Biography for 4th-6th grade
in Biographies (Location: BIO)