- Hugh Mercer
Hugh Mercer (
January 17 ,1726 –January 12 ,1777 ) was aphysician , abrigadier general in theContinental Army and a close friend toGeorge Washington . Mercer died as a result of his wounds received at theBattle of Princeton and became a fallen hero and rallying symbol of theAmerican Revolution .Early life and career
Mercer was born near
Rosehearty , at the manse of Pitsligo Kirk,Aberdeenshire ,Scotland , to Presbyterian Minister, Reverend William Mercer of Pitsligo Parish Church and Ann Monro. At 15, he attended theUniversity of Aberdeen , Marischal College, studying medicine and graduated a Doctor. He was assistant surgeon in the army ofBonnie Prince Charlie in 1745, and was present at theBattle of Culloden when Charles' Army was crushed onApril 16 ,1746 , and any survivors were hunted down and killed. As a fugitive in his own homeland in 1747, Mercer fledScotland after months in hiding. He bought his way onto a ship and moved to America, settling near what is nowMercersburg, Pennsylvania , and practiced medicine for eight years.In 1755, when General
Edward Braddock 's army was cut down by the French and Indians, Mercer was shocked by the same butchery he remembered at Culloden. He came to the aid of the wounded and eventually took up arms in support of the army that a few years back was hunting him, this time as a soldier, not a surgeon. By 1756 he was commissioned acaptain in a Pennsylvaniaregiment , and accompanied Lt. Col.John Armstrong 's expedition on the raid of the Indian village of Kittanning in September 1756. During the attack, Mercer was badly wounded and separated from his unit. He trekked 100 miles through the woods for fourteen days, injured and with no supplies, until he found his way back toFort Shirley , where he was recognized and promoted. He rose to the rank ofcolonel and commanded garrisons. It was during these trying times that Mercer developed a life-long and warm friendship with another colonel, George Washington. After befriending several Virginia men, Mercer moved toFredericksburg, Virginia in 1760 to begin his medical practice anew at the conclusion of the war.When Mercer arrived in Fredericksburg, it was a thriving Scottish community that must have been a happy sanctuary for a Scotsman who could never again see his homeland. He became a noted member and businessman in town, buying land and involving himself in local trade. He became a member of the Fredericksburg
Masonic Lodge in 1767, and sat as its Master a few years later. (Two members of this same lodge, Washington andJames Monroe , would later become American Presidents, and at least eight members were generals of the American Revolution (Washington, Mercer,George Weedon ,William Woodford ,Fielding Lewis , Thomas Posey, Gustavus Wallace, and theMarquis de Lafayette (honorary in 1824) – far more than any other group, institution or organization save the pre-Revolution British Army. [http://www.masoniclodge4.org This lodge] is still in existence today.)Soon after this, Mercer opened a physician’s
apothecary and practice. His apothecary in Fredericksburg, Virginia is now a museum. George Washington's mother, Mary Washington, became one of Mercer's patients, and Mercer prospered as a respected doctor in the area. Mercer married Isabella Gordon and fathered five children: Ann Mercer Patton, John Mercer, William Mercer, George Weedon Mercer, and Hugh Tennant Mercer. In 1774, George Washington soldFerry Farm , his childhood home, to Mercer, who wanted to make this prize the land that he and his family would settle for the remainder of his days.During 1775, Mercer was a member of the Fredericksburg Committee of Safety, and on
April 25 he was one of the members of the Independent Company of the Town of Fredericksburg who sent a letter of concern to then-Colonel George Washington when the British removed gunpowder from the magazine at Williamsburg. In an August vote, Mercer was excluded from the elected leadership of the new regiments formed by the Virginia Convention because he was a "northern Briton," but onSeptember 12 he was elected Colonel of the Minute Men of Spotsylvania, King George, Stafford, and Caroline Counties.On
November 17 Mercer was one of 21 members chosen for the Committee of Safety of Spotsylvania County. OnJanuary 11 ,1776 , Mercer was appointed Colonel to what soon became the3rd Virginia Regiment of theVirginia Line , and the next day George Weedon was appointed Lieutenant Colonel. Future president James Monroe and futureChief Justice of the United States John Marshall also served as officers under his command. In June 1776 Mercer received a letter from the Continental Congress, signed by John Hancock, appointing him Brigadier-General in the Armies of the United Colonies and requesting him to report to headquarters in New York immediately. Mercer soon left Fredericksburg to join theContinental Army .The American Revolution
Before the New York Campaign, Washington ordered two forts built to repel the
Royal Navy . On the New York side of theHudson River ,Fort Washington was constructed, and Mercer himself oversaw the building of the earthen fortification on theNew Jersey side, named Fort Lee. Though bravely defended, the British captured Fort Washington onNovember 16 ,1776 , and the Americans abandoned Fort Lee four days later. The retreat to New Jersey became known as “the Crisis of the Revolution", because the enlistments of most of Washington's beaten and down-trodden soldiers ended onNew Year's Day 1777.There are rumors that Mercer exclusively originated Washington's daring plan to cross the
Delaware River and surprise the Hessians at theBattle of Trenton onDecember 26 ,1776 , and he was certainly a major contributor to its execution. Because of the win at Trenton (and a small monetary bonus), Washington's men agreed to a ten-day extension to their enlistment. When Washington decided to face off with Cornwallis during theSecond Battle of Trenton onJanuary 2 ,1777 , Mercer was given a major role in the defense of the city.The next day, January 3, Washington's army was en route to
Princeton, New Jersey . While leading a vanguard of 350 soldiers, Mercer's brigade encountered two British regiments and a mounted unit. A fight broke out at an orchard grove and Mercer’s horse was shot from under him. Getting to his feet, he was quickly surrounded by British troops who mistook him for George Washington and ordered him to surrender. Outnumbered, he drew his saber and began an unequal contest. He was finally beaten to the ground by musket butts and bayonet thrusts.When he learned of the British attack and saw some of Mercer's men in retreat, Washington himself entered the fray. Washington rallied Mercer's men and pushed back the British regiments, but Mercer had been left on the field to die with multiple bayonet wounds to his body and blows to his head. (Legend has it that a beaten Mercer, with a bayonet still impaled in him, did not want to leave his men and the battle and was given a place to rest on a white oak tree's trunk, while those who remained with him stood their ground. The tree became known as “the Mercer Oak” and is the key element of the seal of
Mercer County, New Jersey .)When he was discovered, Mercer was carried to the field hospital in the Thomas Clarke House (now a museum) at the eastern end of the battlefield. In spite of medical efforts by
Benjamin Rush , Mercer was mortally wounded and died nine agonizing days later onJanuary 12 ,1777 .Because of Mercer’s courage and sacrifice, Washington was able to proceed into Princeton and defeat the British forces there. He then moved and quartered his forces to Morristown in victory. Because of those victories, Washington's army reenlisted, the French finally approved arms and supplies to the Americans and a stunned Cornwallis pulled his forces back to New York to reassess the surprising American successes. The "crisis" had ended, America had the means to fight, and British public support for the war slowly began to wane. A portrait by
Charles Wilson Peale entitled "Washington at the Battle of Princeton, January 3, 1777" allegedly shows the dying Mercer behind Washington-Mercer portrait being based on a brother. Reprotably the Trumbull sketch of Mercer {above} was based on a son of General Mercer.Family lineage and heritage
Succeeding generations of Mercer's family have distinguished themselves. Famous direct descendants of Hugh Mercer were
Waller T. Patton and his brothers George Smith Patton andJohn Mercer Patton , who in turn were ancestors of GeneralGeorge S. Patton, Jr. Other direct descendants include Confederate GeneralHugh Weedon Mercer and songwriterJohnny Mercer .InFredericksburg, Virginia , theAssociation for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities maintains a renovated version of Mercer's apothecary shop to this day at 1020 Caroline Street. A statue erected by Congress to honor Mercer stands outside Kenmore Mansion, and the Mercer Counties of New Jersey, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Kentucky, West Virginia and Illinois are named for him.In film
In the 2000 television film "The Crossing", a dramatization of Washington's crossing of the Delaware and the battle of Trenton, Mercer is played by
Roger Rees .Namesakes
*
Mercer County, New Jersey where Trenton is located, was named after Hugh Mercer.
*Mercer County, Pennsylvania
*Mercer County, Ohio
*Mercer County, Kentucky
*Mercer County, Illinois
*Mercer County, West Virginia
* The town ofMercerville, New Jersey
* TheMercer Oak
*Mercersburg, Pennsylvania
* Mercer Street in New York City is named in Hugh Mercer's honor.
* [http://www.cityschools.com/cityschools/hughmercer/generalinfo/index.html Hugh Mercer Elementary School] in Fredericksburg, Virginia.References
External links
* [http://www.rosehearty./ Hugh Mercer at Virtual American Biographies]
* [http://www.freelancestar.com/News/FLS/2004/092004/09042004/1488210 Hugh Mercer: An Unexpected Life]
* [http://www.apva.org/hughmercerapothecary/ Hugh Mercer Apothecary]
* [http://www.historypoint.org/columns2.asp?column_id=529&column_type=hpfeature History Point: Central Rappahannock Regional Library]
* [http://home.att.net/~m.meisberger/Famous.htm Fredericksburg Masonic Lodge #4]
* [http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=2677 Find A Grave] - Hugh Mercer
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