David G. Swaim


David Gaskill Swaim was Judge Advocate General of the United States Army from February 18, 1881 to December 22, 1894.

Career

Born in Salem, Ohio, in December 1834, Swaim became a lawyer in 1858. With the outbreak of the American Civil War, he joined the 65th Ohio Infantry as a first lieutenant. He was later promoted to adjutant of his regiment, and then acting adjutant of the brigade. He was wounded at the battles of Shiloh and Chickamauga and was promoted to captain.
When the war ended, he remained in the Army, serving in the Judge Advocate General's Corps until 1879, when President Rutherford B. Hayes appointed him Judge Advocate General and promoted him to brigadier general. Swaim had leapfrogged over judge advocates senior to him as a result of his relationship to President-elect James A. Garfield. This created a degree of enmity among the officers who served under Swaim’s supervision. In United States v. Mason, Swaim advised President Chester Arthur that the court-martial did not possess jurisdiction over a sergeant who had tried to kill Garfield's assassin. Arthur disagreed and determined not to follow Swaim's advice. Instead, Arthur turned to Major Asa Bird Gardiner to argue to the Supreme Court that Mason's court-martial conviction should stand. This may have been the start of the Swaim's downfall. He was a companion of the District of Columbia Commandery of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States.
Another basis for Swaim's ultimate downfall might have resided in his desire to enforce equal treatment for African-American soldiers and officers. As Judge Advocate General, he voided court-martial findings against Johnson Chesnut Whittaker. This action was confirmed by President Chester A. Arthur, but may have led to "ill will" against Swaim.

Later life and death

In 1884, charges of financial improprieties were levied against him, and he was suspended from duty for ten years. President Grover Cleveland reinstated him, and he retired immediately afterward. He died three years later at his home in Washington, D.C..

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