At the outbreak of the Civil War he was elected captain of a local militia company that compelled the surrender of United States troops at Camp Cooper. He then transferred to the Eighth Texas Cavalry, better known as Terry's Texas Rangers. On November 8, 1862, after the deaths of Benjamin Franklin Terry and Thomas S. Lubbock, Harrison became colonel of the Terry Rangers. He was promoted to colonel of the regiment just before the battle of Murfreesboro (December 30, 1862-January 3, 1863). His command served under Maj. Gen. Joseph Wheeler through the Chickamauga (August-September, 1863), Chattanooga (October-November, 1863), and Atlanta (May 1-September 8, 1864) campaigns, and in the resistance to Maj. Gen. William T. Sherman's campaign in Georgia and the Carolinas. When Joseph E. Johnston surrendered at Durham Station, North Carolina, Harrison advised the Texans to cut their way through the Union lines and rally in the West. Characterized by one of his soldiers as "a small, nervous, irascible man," Harrison was never popular with the regiment because of his attempts to enforce discipline in the ranks through corporal punishment. Ranger lieutenant Frank Batchelor could find no fault with Harrison "except that he is addicted to getting drunk & does it when battle is pending & has thus lost the confidence of his men & injured our effectiveness against the enemy."
Harrison was wounded early in March 1865 in a cavalry skirmish near Johnsonville, South Carolina. Disabled from service, he had left his command to recover from his wound when, on or about March 15, he received official notice of his appointment by President Jefferson Davis as a brigadier general, to rank from January 14, 1865. The terms of the appointment required the taking of an oath of office, which Harrison fully intended to do, but his wounds and the surrender of General Johnston's army on April 26, 1865, prevented his doing so, and he never returned to his command. He went back to the army and without surrendering made his way to Macon, Mississippi, where he was paroled on May 31, 1865. Upon returning to Waco he swore a loyalty oath and in July 1865 applied to President Andrew Johnson for a special pardon; it was granted in 1866. Thereafter Harrison entered politics. He was elected district judge on June 25, 1866, for the Nineteenth District, Lampasas and McLennan counties, but was removed. He was a Democratic presidential elector in 1872. Unreconstructed to the end, he died in Waco on July 14, 1891, where he is buried. Source
Block 19
Oakwood Cemetery
Waco

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