- Gershom Mott
Gershom Mott (
April 7 ,1822 –November 29 ,1884 ) was aUnited States Army officer and a General in theUnion Army , a commander in the Eastern Theater of theAmerican Civil War .Early life
General Mott was born in
Lamberton, New Jersey , a town outside of Trenton. He was the grandson ofRevolutionary War Captain John Mott, who legend had it, guided GeneralGeorge Washington ’s army down theDelaware River to the celebrated victory at theBattle of Trenton . The reliability of this claim has recently come under question. His parents were Gershom and Phebe (or Phoebe) Rose Scudder Mott.Heidler, p. 1369.] Gershom Mott was the youngest of five children. He received his education at the Trenton Academy, which is now the Trenton Public Library (Main Branch). Gershom Mott began to work when he was only fourteen years old as a sales clerk in a dry goods store inNew York City . He became a second lieutenant in the 10th U.S. Infantry during theMexican-American War . [Heidler, p. 1369, claims he fought duringWinfield Scott 's campaign. Warner, p. 338, claims the 10th U.S. saw no foreign service.] OnAugust 8 ,1849 , Gershom Mott married Elizabeth Smith. They had one child, Kate, who recorded and published the family genealogy in later years. From 1849 to 1861, Mott held a variety of jobs in New Jersey with the Lamberton Port, Bordentown, Delaware & Raritan Canal Co., and the Bordentown Bank.Civil War
In the summer after the start of the Civil War, Mott was appointed the lieutenant colonel of the
5th New Jersey Infantry , part of theArmy of the Potomac . His regiment fought in thePeninsula Campaign and shortly after theBattle of Williamsburg he was promoted tocolonel and command of the6th New Jersey Volunteer Infantry . He was commended for bravery in theBattle of Seven Pines , but he and his regiment saw little action in theSeven Days Battles .During the
Second Battle of Bull Run , Mott was severely wounded in the arm and for his bravery was promoted to brigadier general onSeptember 7 ,1862 . He was forced to recuperate during theBattle of Antietam and returned to the Army just after theBattle of Fredericksburg . Mott led a brigade in the III Corps at theBattle of Chancellorsville , but was again seriously wounded and missed the subsequentGettysburg Campaign .. His brigade was commanded by ColonelGeorge C. Burling during that engagement.Mott returned to duty in the fall of 1863 and led his brigade in the Bristoe and Mine Run campaigns. He commanded the 4th Division of the II Corps during the 1864
Overland Campaign . At theBattle of Spotsylvania Court House his division suffered such heavy losses during an assault on the Mule Shoe that they were dispersed and the division discontinued despite Mott's protests. In addition, Mott and his division, once the proud command of Maj. Gen.Joseph Hooker , were thought unreliable byWinfield S. Hancock andFrancis C. Barlow . Mott continued as a brigade commander under Maj. Gen.David B. Birney and was restored to division command (3rd Division, II Corps) in July, performing well during theSiege of Petersburg and theAppomattox Campaign . He was one of the few Union officers to be commended for his actions in the disastrousBattle of the Crater , for which he was given a brevet promotion to major general. Three days before the Confederate surrender at Appomattox, Mott was wounded in the leg at theBattle of Amelia Springs . (Régis de Trobriand served as acting division commander for the remainder of the campaign.) He attained by war's end a reputation for competency and bravery. OnDecember 1 ,1865 , he was promoted to major general, effectiveMay 26 ,1865 .Postbellum
Mott resigned his volunteer commission on
February 20 ,1866 . In 1868 he was offered a commission as colonel in the regular army, but chose to remain in civilian life. He served briefly as an executive with the Camden & Amboy Railroad and as a banker, but spent the remainder of his life in various offices in the state government of New Jersey: state treasurer, warden of theNew Jersey State Prison , and major general and commander of theNew Jersey National Guard (1873–1884). He died inNew York City and was given a full military funeral. He is buried in Riverview Cemetery in Trenton. [Eicher, p. 400.]For Gershom Mott's dedication to New Jersey and his country the residents of the city of Trenton renamed the Sixth Ward School Gershom Mott Elementary School in 1896.
ee also
*List of American Civil War generals
References
*Catton, Bruce, "Grant Takes Command", Little, Brown & Co., 1968, ISBN 0-316-13210-1.
* Eicher, John H., and Eicher, David J., "Civil War High Commands", Stanford University Press, 2001, ISBN 0-8047-3641-3.
* Heidler, David S., and Heidler, Jeanne T., "Gershom Mott", "Encyclopedia of the American Civil War: A Political, Social, and Military History", W. W. Norton & Company, 2000, ISBN 0-393-04758-X.
* Warner, Ezra J., "Generals in Blue: Lives of the Union Commanders", Louisiana State University Press, 1964, ISBN 0-8071-0822-7.Notes
External links
* [http://spicerweb.org/Genealogy/Mott/mottofthethirdbattalion.htm The Controversy over John Mott at Trenton]
* [http://www.trenton.k12.nj.us/Mott/history_of_mott.htm Tribute to Gershom Mott on the Gershom Mott Elementary School website]###@@@KEY@@@###
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