b. 1800-08-22
               
               d. 1889-05-09
               
               
                  
                  William Selby Harney, born 
22 August 1800 in Haysborough, Tennessee, was a soldier, and later a general, in the United States
                     Army. His troops occupied 
San Juan Island during what came to be known as the Pig War. After the end of the Pig War, Harney,
                     along with 
G. E. Pickett, was accused by 
Major Granville Haller of being a Confederate conspirator; as Harney and 
Pickett were both southern-born, 
Haller said that they had both conspired to instigate a conflict between the British and
                     the U.S. 
as part of a plot to help the South in its growing political disagreement with the
                        North.
 However, these accusations were mere speculation on 
Haller's part, and never amounted to any real actions being taken against Harney or 
Pickett.
 
                  
                  Harney commanded troops in the 
Washington Territory, and after a pig belonging to the Hudson's Bay Company (HBC) was shot on 
San Juan by an American settler, Harney's help was requested by the American settlers. The
                     HBC demanded that the pig be paid for by the settler, and if he could not procure
                     the money he would be arrested and taken to 
Victoria to be put on trial; this prompted Harney being called in to prevent any hostilities, and he deployed
                     troops to the island led by 
G. E. Pickett. However, 
Sir James Douglas, asserted in this despatch that 
the reasons
 for which Harney justified the occupation of the island 
do not exist; the tale which has been imposed upon [Harney] is a fabrication.
 Douglas also stated that 
the occupation of the Island is owing solely to orders issued by General Harney.
 Eventually 
Winfield Scott was ordered to take over for Harney, and later on Harney was temporarily removed from command of U.S. forces in 
Oregon Territory.
 
                  
                  Harney's career in the Army started in 
1818 and ended when he retired in 
1863. Many of his military assignments took place on the frontier and consisted of instilling
                     American influence among the First Nations. In 
1846, as the U.S. began moving toward a Mexican-American war, Harney was promoted to colonel
                     and commander of the Second Dragoons, and in this position fought many battles against
                     Mexico. In 
1858, Harney made brigadier general and commanded the Department of 
Oregon. It was during his time in this position that the Pig War took place. After Harney
                     was removed from this position, he commanded the Department of the West, starting
                     in 
1861. Harney retired in 
1863 and later became a member of the Peace Commision of 
1867. Harney died in Orlando, Florida, on 
9 May 1889.
 
                  
                  
                     
                     
                        - 1. Richmond L. Clow, Harney, William Selby, American National Biography.
 
                        - 2. Adam Arenson and Andrew R. Graybill, ed., Civil War Wests; Testing the Limits of the United States (Oakland: U of California P, 2015), 18.
 
                        - 3. Gordon Lyall, From Imbroglio to Pig War: The San Juan Island Dispute, 1853-71, in History and Memory, BC Studies no. 186 (Summer 2015): 75.
 
                        - 4. Ibid., pg. 76.
 
                        - 5. Douglas to Lytton, 12 August 1859, 9709, CO 305/11, 68.
 
                        - 6. Ibid.
 
                        - 7. Hammond to Merivale, 30 September 1859, 9774, CO 305/12, 287.
 
                        - 8. Murray to Rogers, 19 June 1860, 6262, CO 305/15, 191.
 
                        - 9. Richmond L. Clow, Harney, William Selby, American National Biography.