- John Morin Scott
Infobox Military Person
name=John Morin Scott
lived=1730-1784
placeofbirth=New York City, New York
placeofdeath=New York City, New York
caption=
nickname=
allegiance=United States of America
serviceyears=1775-1777
rank=Brigadier General
commands=1st and 2nd New York Battalions;New York militia regiments
unit=
battles=Battle of Brooklyn (Long Island )Battle of Harlem Heights Battle of White Plains John Morin Scott (1730
New York City -September 14 ,1784 New York City ) was alawyer , military officer, andstatesman before, during and after theAmerican Revolution .Ancestry
The Scott family descends from Sir John Scott,
Baronet (1648-1712), ofAncrum ,Roxburghshire inScotland , whose second son, Captain John Scott (1678-1740), emigrated to New York City, where he received the rights of citizenship in 1702. He had nine children, the eldest of which was John Scott (1702-1733), a Manhattan merchant, who married Marian Morin (1703-1755), daughter of Huguenot settler Pierre Morin. Their only child was John Morin Scott.Life
Scott was born in
Manhattan and attendedpublic school there. His father died when he was three years old, and his mother never remarried.He graduated Yale College in 1746, at the age of 16. After further study he was admitted to the New York
bar association in 1752, and practiced law in Manhattan, where he also served as analderman from 1756 to 1761.During the Revolutionary War, John Scott was a member of the
New York Provincial Congress while also serving as abrigadier general underGeorge Washington in theNew York and New Jersey campaign . He commanded the 1st New York (Independent)Battalion , the 2nd New York (County ) Battalion, and several New YorkMilitia Regiments . He fought with Putnam's division at the Battle of Brooklyn on August 27, 1776, and was the last of Washington's generals to argue against surrendering Manhattan to the British -- possibly due to his large landholdings there, including what is nowTimes Square and New York City's Theater District.Twenty days later, on September 16, 1776, Scott led the same battalions and regiments at the
Battle of Harlem Heights , an American victory. On October 28, 1776, his forces participated in the inconclusiveBattle of White Plains .After the war, Scott regained his Manhattan estate and was a
candidate for the firstgovernor ship ofNew York State , losing to George Clinton. He became, instead, New York's firstSecretary of State , astate senator , and served as an activedelegate to theContinental Congress .His body is interred at the north entrance of
Trinity Church, New York . His inscribed slab is visible from the corner ofWall Street and Broadway. Anequestrian statue is erected in his honor inupper Manhattan .His son,
Lewis Allaire Scott , was appointed Secretary of State of New York in 1789.Offices, titles, and affiliations
*
Sons of Liberty founding member
*New York alderman (1756 - 1761)
*New York General Committee member (1775)
*New York Provincial Congress member (1775 - 1777)
*Brigadier General of the New York Militia during the Revolutionary War
*Member of the State of New York committee to author astate constitution (1776)
*New York State Senator, Southern District (1777 - 1782)
*New York delegate in the Continental Congress (1780 and 1782)
*Secretary of State of New York (1778 - 1784); died in officeAdditionally, Scott was elected
Associate Justice of theState Supreme Court of New York in 1777, but declined.References
*Dillon, Dorothy R. "The New York
Triumvirate : A Study of the Legal and Political Careers ofWilliam Livingston , John Morin Scott, William Smith, Jr.". New York:Columbia University Press , 1949.
**Reprint: 1968. ISBN 0-404-51548-7ources
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* [http://politicalgraveyard.com/bio/scott5.html] Political Graveyard
* [http://books.google.com.br/books?id=eHkFAAAAQAAJ&pg=RA1-PA867&lpg=RA1-PA867&dq=lewis+allaire+scott&source=web&ots=AlEGYY1tVQ&sig=WU6X74EvXhayudR4B-bzYU4MuQM&hl=pt-BR#PRA1-PA867,M1 Google Book] "Lifes of Eminent Philadelphians, Now Deceased" by Henry Simpson (W. Brotherhead, Philadelphia, 1859, pages 867ff on Philadelphia Mayor J. M. Scott and his ancestry)
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