James Gordon (British Army officer, died 1783)
James Gordon | |
---|---|
Born | c.1735 |
Died | 17 October 1783 (aged 48) |
Allegiance | Great Britain |
Service | British Army |
Rank | Lieutenant-Colonel |
Battles / wars | American Revolutionary War |
Relations | Father: James Gordon second Laird of Ellon (died April 1749) Mother: Elizabeth Gordon (née Glen) (1712-1792) Brother: Lieutenant-General Andrew Gordon (died 1806) Nephew: Lieutenant-General Robert Balfour, 6th of Balbirnie (1772-1837) |
Lieutenant-Colonel James Gordon, the third and last Laird of the barony of Ellon,[1] (c. 1735—17 October 1783)[2] was a highly regarded British Army officer who fought in the American Revolutionary War. In 1782, he played a role in the Asgill Affair, the controversial confinement and proposed execution of British Captain Charles Asgill.
Early life
[edit]James Gordon was born in Ellon, Aberdeenshire, Scotland, c.1735. His father was James Gordon, the second Laird of the barony of Ellon (died April 1749).[3][1] His mother was Elizabeth Glen (1712-1792),[4][5] daughter of Alexander Glen and sister of James Glen (1701-1777),[6][7] Governor of South Carolina and keeper of the Palace of Linlithgow.[8][9]
The Gordon family lived at Linlithgow Palace. On 1 February 1746, government troops, under the command of Lieutenant General Henry Hawley, were pursuing Jacobites in the area, and they left their overnight camp in the palace, rushing out leaving their campfires burning. The 320-year-old structure was badly damaged.[10]
On 4 September 1747, the elder Gordon executed a deed (registered 23 March 1732) empowering his spouse, conjoined with others, to have full charge of his lands or to dispose of them. He died, according to his will, in April 1749. His inventory was given up by his widow, Elizabeth Glen.[9]
Upon death of his father, Gordon inherited the barony. He did not keep Ellon long, for the lands were offered for sale on 8 April 1752. The articles of roup, in the Ellon Charter Chest, show that the upset price was £16,000 sterling, and in addition there is a stipulation that there shall be a present of 200 guineas for a gown to the said Elizabeth Glen. After a protracted competition, the lands were bought for George Gordon, 3rd Earl of Aberdeen in 1752, at £17,600, plus 200 guineas for the gown. There was an annuity of £120 to Elizabeth Glen reserved from the price".[1]
That same year, 1752, Gordon petitioned for a writership (administrator) in the Honourable East India Company.[8][11]
Military career
[edit]Gordon initially served as an officer in the 115th Regiment of Foot (Royal Scotch Lowlanders)[12] which were raised at Paisley in 1701, and disbanded about 1763, when he was placed on half pay.[1] He was appointed major in the 80th Regiment of Foot (Royal Edinburgh Volunteers)[13] on 16 December 1777 and accompanied the regiment on active service during the American Revolutionary War[12] in August 1779. Gordon fought under General Charles Cornwallis, but became an American prisoner of war following capitulation after the siege of Yorktown, Virginia, in October 1781.[14] "His soldiership during the war," writes Katherine Mayo, "earned him Cornwallis' praise – coupled once with an aside: 'When I first knew Gordon, twenty years ago, gay in gay London, who could have guessed how much lay in the man?'"[15]
In May 1782, 13 captains under Gordon's command were compelled to draw lots to determine which one should be executed in retaliation for the earlier execution of patriot captain Joshua Huddy on orders from William Franklin, the former Royal governor of New Jersey.[16][17] Charles Asgill drew the paper marked unfortunate and was put under a sentence of death.[16][17] Due in large part to intervention by the French government, Asgill was released to return to England in November 1782.[14][18]
Death and legacy
[edit]Gordon died of dropsy on 17 October 1783 at the Morris House in Kingsbridge, Upper Manhattan.[19][20]
On his deathbed he was visited by Captain Samuel Graham who had served with him throughout the Revolutionary war. In his memoir, Graham stated that Gordon handed him a letter he had received from Lady Asgill (Charles Asgill's mother) in which she expresses her deepest gratitude for all that Gordon had done for her son.[21] Another source confirms the existence of the letter, but states that it did not reach New York before Gordon died.[22]
He was given a military funeral[2] and was buried in an unmarked grave at Trinity Church Cemetery.[23] At the time of his burial, Bishop Charles Inglis was the Rector of Trinity Church. On 8 March 2022, Trinity Church erected a memorial stanchion in Gordon's honour.
Following Gordon's death, Charles Asgill wrote:
… These were the attentions I received from General Washington ― I had however a comfort beyond his reach ― totally above his power to invade it was the Pride, the Consolation & Support which I derived from the exalted Friendship & Kind Compassion of Major Gordon of the 80th Regt who feeling for the distresses of a Brother Officer, [entrusted] by the best of Hearts in the cause of humanity & unwilling to leave a Youth of eighteen unadvised & unsupported to act in so peculiar & difficult a situation, sacrificed every Comfort to partake my hardships & Confinement & by the impulse of his excellent & noble Heart, felt on the [first] acquaintance all the steady & persevering Zeal that the longest & most tried Friendship could hope for or Claim he was there the whole of this transaction the partaker of my hardships the support of my Spirits, & the monitor of my conduct I am delighted at having the opportunity of proclaiming to the World his generous & benevolent attentions Tho whilst I do justice to his Memory I aggravate the sensations of regret, which I must ever retain, for the loss of him.
Gordon, who strenuously advocated on Asgill's behalf during the ordeal, suffered greatly from it. Ambrose Vanderpoel writes: "He took Asgill's misfortune keenly to heart, and his health, which previously had been somewhat delicate, was permanently impaired by the anxieties of the summer."[24]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d "James Gordon". Huntly Express. 7 December 1906. Retrieved 8 May 2020.
- ^ a b Monday 20 October 1783 New York Gazette and the Weekly Mercury
- ^ Edward J. Davies, "The Balfours of Balbirnie and Whittingehame", The Scottish Genealogist, 60(2013):84-90.
- ^ Jamieson, Bruce (2019). Linlithgow Lives. p. 11.
- ^ "Edinburgh and The Lothians Chapter XXIII - Linlithgow". Electric Scotland. Retrieved 15 November 2019.
- ^ "James Glen (1701-1777)". Scottish Places. Retrieved 15 November 2019.
- ^ Robinson, Walter Stitt (1996). James Glen: From Scottish Provost to Royal Governor of South Carolina. Greenwood Publishing. p. 130. ISBN 9780313297601.
- ^ a b Graham, James John (1862). Memoir of General Graham: with notices of the campaigns in which he was engaged from 1779 to 1801. Edinburgh: R. & R. Clark. p. 18.
Glen Gordon.
- ^ a b "James Gordon". Huntly Express. 30 November 1906. Retrieved 8 May 2020.
- ^ Jamieson, Bruce (2014). Linlithgow Through Time. Amberley. ISBN 978-1445636221.
- ^ "Select Writings of Robert Chambers Volume 5 History of the Rebellion 1745-1746". W. And R. Chambers. 1847.
- ^ a b "The raising of a regiment in the American War of Independence III". Journal of the Society for Army Historical Research. 1949. Retrieved 14 September 2019.
- ^ "80th Regiment of Foot (Royal Edinburgh Volunteers)". Regiments.org. Archived from the original on 28 November 2007. Retrieved 14 September 2019.
- ^ a b Wright, Waldo Carlton. "The Captain Asgill Affair" (PDF). Dalhousie University. pp. 452–458. Retrieved 14 September 2019.
- ^ Mayo, Katherine (1938). General Washington's Dilemma. London: Jonathan Cape. p. 12.
- ^ a b Everest, Allan S. (1976). "VI Moses Hazen and the Canadian Refugees in the American Revolution". Between War and Peace, 1781–1783. Syracuse University Press. pp. 96–112. doi:10.2307/j.ctv64h762.10. Retrieved 28 January 2023 – via JSTOR.
- ^ a b Abel, Martha (2019). "'Unfortunate': Lancaster, Pennsylvania, May 26–28, 1782". The Journal of Lancaster County's Historical Society. 120 (3): 97–105. OCLC 2297909.
- ^ "Asgill Affair". The Digital Encyclopedia of George Washington. Mount Vernon Ladies' Association. Retrieved 28 January 2023.
- ^ "Morris-Jumel Mansion". Morris-Jumel Mansion. Retrieved 14 September 2019.
- ^ Scott, Keith (1977). Genealogical Data from N.Y. Gazette-Mercury, 1783. Genealogical Publishing Company. p. 242. ISBN 0-8063-0777-3.
- ^ Graham, James John (1862). Memoir of General Graham: with notices of the campaigns in which he was engaged from 1779 to 1801. Edinburgh: R. & R. Clark. p. 107.
Copy of Lady Asgill's letter to Lieutenant-Colonel Gordon, delivered to me by him on his deathbed.
- ^ Skelton, Constance Oliver; Bulloch, John Malcolm (1912). Gordons under arms; a biographical muster roll of officers named Gordon in the navies and armies of Britain, Europe, America and the Jacobite risings. University of Aberdeen. p. 162.
- ^ Mayo, Katherine (1938). "General Washington's Dilemma". Jonathan Cape. p. 259.
- ^ Vanderpoel, Ambrose (1921). History of Chatham New Jersey. Charles Francis Press. p. 455.
Further reading
[edit]- Davies, Edward J. "The Balfours of Balbirnie and Whittingehame", The Scottish Genealogist, 60 (2013) p. 84-90. Available from the Scottish Genealogy Society (www
.scotsgenealogy ).com - Graham, James J., (1862) Memoir of General Graham with notices of the campaigns in which he was engaged from 1779 to 1801, Edinburgh: R&R Clark
- Jamieson, Bruce, (2019) "Linlithgow Lives, Insights into Linlithgow life through the centuries" p. 11.Available from Linlithgow Museum (www
.linlithgowmuseum ).org - Jones, T. Cole, Captives of Liberty, Prisoners of War and the Politics of Vengeance in the American Revolution 2019 | ISBN 9780812251692
External links
[edit]- British Army and the Revolutionary War, 1775-1783, Gregory Urwin, C-Span (4 October 2019)