"A portrait is a picture in which there is just a tiny little something not quite right about the mouth." -- John Singer Sargent

Thursday, October 17, 2024

Richard Montgomery


This 1862 portrait of Richard Montgomery reading a map engraved by G.  R.  Hall from a painting by Alonzo Chappel seems to be the standard image of Richard Montgomery. It appeared in Duykinck's The National Portrait Gallery of Eminent Americans: Including Orators, Statesmen, Naval and Military Heroes, Jurists, Authors, etc. , Vol. 1. 

Richard Montgomery is most famous as the namesake of 18 (or so) counties and cities in the United  States. He is so commemorated because he was one of the first and the highest ranking casualty of the Revolution, dying on the last day of 1775 trying to take the fortified city of Quebec.  For short bio's of Richard  Montgomery see: Appletons' Cyclopædia or The Biographical Dictionary of America …

Less well known, more contemporary, views of Major General Montgomery include John Norman's full length 1781 portrait below. 

Major Genl. Richd. Montgomery
Slain in Storming Quebec Decbr. '31 1775
J. Norman  Sc.

And this head and shoulders portrait which appeared in James Murray's book  An Impartial History of the War in America published in Newcastle on Tyne  in 1782. 

General Richard Montgomery

As we have said, Richard Montgomery's major contribution to American History is his death early in the Revolutionary War. The standard image of which is John Trumbull's “The Death of General Montgomery in the Attack on Quebec December 31 1775.”

The Death of Montgomery  (Detail)

The Death of General Montgomery in the Attack on Quebec December 31 1775
by John Trumbull, 1786

In this detail, Montgomery has fallen into the arms of Mathias Ogden, a New Jersey Volunteer. On  his left is 1st Lieutenant Morgan Humphries of Morgan's Company of Virginia Riflemen. Farther left is “Colonel Joseph Louis,” chief of the Oneida Indians. Dead at Montgomery's feet are his aides-de-camp, Capt. Jacob Cheeseman and Captain John MacPherson, both of the 1st New York Regiment. To Montgomery's left are 1st Lieutenant Samuel Cooper of  the 2nd Connecticut Regiment and Lieutenant Col. Donald Campbell, deputy quartermaster of the New York Department, and Montgomery's successor in command. Campbell ordered an immediate retreat. (See Yale University Art Museum and Catalogue of Paintings, 1835.)
Two plaques at 193 Boulevard Champlain,  mark the spot where Montgomery fell. The English plaque reads: 
“Here stood
the Undaunted Fifty
safeguarding
🍁Canada🍁
defeating Montgomery
at the Pres de Ville Barricade
on the last day of
🍁1775🍁
Guy Carleton
commanding at
Quebec.”


High on cliffs above, there once hung a sign reading “Montgomery Fell Dec. 31st, 1775.”


This sign was placed by Alfred Hawkins (See Lossing, 1859) to replace a previous sign put there in 1852 (See Rockwell, 1927).  The earlier sign read:  “Here Major General Montgomery Fell, December 31st, 1775.”  (See also D. Murray,  1910)

Here's an 1892 view of  “Près-de-Ville - Place where Montgomery was killed.”

Près-de-Ville
Endroit ou Montgomery a été Tué 

Alonzo Chappel painted another image of “The Death of General Richard Montgomery on 31st December 1775.” (You can buy it on E-bay.)


C. W. Jefferys pictured the event for Canadian Magazine
Vol. XXXVI
No. 5
,
 March, 1911
.

 Death of  Montgomery, by C. W. Jefferys, '10.

British soldiers recovered Montgomery's corpse the next day and gave him a burial with military honors inside the walls of Quebec. F. S. Cohurn made this 1892 drawing of the recovery of Montgomery's body on January 1st, 1776.
 

Enlèvement du Cadavre de Montgomery 
Notes Pour Servir à L'Histoire du Général Richard Montgomery
by Faucher de Saint-Maurice, 1893.

 An historical marker in Quebec identifies Jean Gaubert's house where Montgomery was  “encoffined prior to his burial."  Another marker on Côte de la Citadelle near Rue Saint Louis, identifies the spot where Montgomery, McPherson,  Cheeseman and a number of other soldiers from Montgomery's command were buried.  The English text of the marker explains that Montgomery's remains were moved in 1818 to Saint Paul's Chapel on Broadway in New York. 
“In this place was buried on the 4th of January 1776, along with his two aides de camp McPherson and Cheeseman and certain of his soldiers, Richard Montgomery, the American general who was killed during the attack of the 31st of December 1775. In 1818 his remains were exhumed and removed to the precincts of St. Paul’s Church, New York.”

Barry Swackhamer (HMdb) took this 2014 photo of the plaque on the stone marking the spot where Montgomery, et. al were  buried:  


Montgomery's Monument on Broadway in New York looks like this.

(Vidor at Wikimedia)
There are two marble plaques.

(Guy Saladino HMdb)


(F. Robby, HMdb)

The inscription on the uppermost plaque reads:
This Monument is erected by the order of CONGRESS,
25th, Janry, 1776, to transmit to Poſterity a grateful remem
brance of the patriotiſm conduct enterprize & perſeverance
of Major General RICHARD MONTGOMERY
Who after a ſeries of succeſses amidſt the most diſcou
raging Difficulties Fell in the attack on
QUEBEC. 31st, Decbr, 1775. Aged 37 Years.
      INVENIT ET SCULPSIT PARISIIS. J. J. CAFFIERI SCULPTOR REGIUS. ANNO DOMINI. MDCCLXVII

The Latin means roughly “Designed and sculpted in Paris by royal sculptor J.J. Caffieri, in the Year of the Lord 1777.” see HMdb

As authorized by Congress in 1776, Benjamin Franklin chose French sculptor Jean-Jacques Caffieri, royal sculptor to Louis 15, to sculpt the monument in 1777. It arrived in Edenton N.C. in 1778, during the war and remained there until 1887 when it was installed in New York.  New York became the Capital of the United  States  on September 13, 1788.

The lower marble plaque, pictured below, notes that Montgomery's body was moved from Quebec and interred here in 1818.


The State of New York
Caused the Remains of
Maj. Gen. RICHARD MONTGOMERY
to be conveyed from Quebec
and Deposited beneath  this Monument
the 8th day of July
1818
(via Bill Coughlin, HMdb )

A modern sign that describes the second plaque makes the claim that Montgomery's Monument  in New York is “the first American memorial.”

(via Bill Coughlin, HMdb)

(via Bill Coughlin, HMdb)
General Richard Montgomery
In 1787, St. Paul’s Chapel erected a monument to honor General Richard Montgomery, the first officer to die in the American Revolution. The Continental Congress commissioned this monument in 1776, the first American memorial. Montgomery’s body was interred at St. Paul’s in 1818, 43 years after his death.

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