Enoch Poor: Difference between revisions

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{{short description|Military figure in the American Revolutionary War}}
{{short description|Military figure in the American Revolutionary War}}
{{Infobox military person
{{Infobox military person
| name         = Enoch Poor
| name = Enoch Poor
| image         = Enoch Poor, General, American Revolutionary War.png
| image = Enoch Poor, General, American Revolutionary War.png
| caption      = Painting by Ulysses Dow Tenney, 1873, after an earlier portrait by [[Tadeusz Kościuszko]]
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1736|06|21}}
| birth_date   = {{Birth date|1736|06|21}}
| death_date = {{Death date and age|1780|9|8|1736|6|21}}
| death_date   = {{Death date and age|1780|9|8|1736|6|21}}
| birth_place = [[Andover, Massachusetts|Andover]], Massachusetts, British America
| birth_place   = [[Andover, Massachusetts|Andover]], [[Province of Massachusetts Bay|Massachusetts]], [[British America]]
| death_place = [[Hackensack, New Jersey]], U.S.
| death_place   = [[Hackensack, New Jersey]], U.S.
| placeofburial = Hackensack, New Jersey
| placeofburial = Hackensack, New Jersey
| placeofburial_label =
| placeofburial_label =
| placeofburial_coordinates = <!-- {{Coord|LAT|LONG|display=inline,title}} -->
| placeofburial_coordinates = | nickname =
| nickname     =
| birth_name =
| birth_name   =
| allegiance =United States
| allegiance   = {{Flag|United States|1777}}
| branch = [[Continental Army]]
| branch       = {{flagicon image|Betsy Ross flag.svg}} [[Continental Army]]
| serviceyears = 1775–1780
| serviceyears = 1775–1780
| rank = Brigadier general
| rank         = [[File:US-O7 insignia.svg|26px]] Brigadier general
| servicenumber =
| servicenumber =
| unit         =
| unit =
| commands     =
| commands =
| battles       =
| battles =
{{tree list}}
{{plainlist|
* [[French and Indian War]]
* [[French and Indian War]]
** [[Expulsion of the Acadians]]
** [[Expulsion of the Acadians]]
* [[American Revolutionary War]]
* [[American Revolutionary War]]
** [[Siege of Boston]]
** [[Invasion of Quebec (1775)|Invasion of Quebec]]
** [[Invasion of Quebec (1775)|Invasion of Quebec]]
** [[Battle of Trenton]]
** [[Battle of Princeton]]
** [[Battles of Saratoga]]
** [[Battles of Saratoga]]
** [[Valley Forge]]
** [[Valley Forge]]
Line 31: Line 32:
** [[Sullivan Expedition]]
** [[Sullivan Expedition]]
*** [[Battle of Newtown]]
*** [[Battle of Newtown]]
{{tree list/end}}
}}
| battles_label =
| battles_label =
| awards       =
| awards =
| relations     =
| relations =
| laterwork     = Ship builder, merchant
| laterwork = Cabinet maker, ship builder, merchant
| signature     =
| signature =
| spouse       = Martha Osgood
| spouse = Martha Osgood
}}
}}
'''Enoch Poor''' (June 21, 1736 ([[Old Style and New Style dates|Old Style]]) – September 8, 1780) was a brigadier general in the [[Continental Army]] during the [[American Revolutionary War]]. He was a ship builder and merchant from [[Exeter, New Hampshire]].
'''Enoch Poor''' (June 21, 1736 ([[Old Style and New Style dates|Old Style]]) – September 8, 1780) was a brigadier general in the [[Continental Army]] during the [[American Revolutionary War]]. He began his life as an apprentice cabinet maker but rose through competence to become a successful ship builder and merchant from [[Exeter, New Hampshire]]. Over five years of continuous service, he became one of [[George Washington]]'s most trusted and reliable brigade commanders.<ref name="SeacoastNH">{{cite web |url=https://www.seacoastnh.com/enoch-poor/ |title=Enoch Poor |publisher=SeacoastNH.com |access-date=November 7, 2025}}</ref>
 
==Early life and career==
 
Poor was born and raised in [[Andover, Massachusetts|Andover]], Province of Massachusetts Bay. His father Thomas Poor had been part of the 1745 expedition that captured [[Louisburg, Nova Scotia]], during [[King George's War]].<ref name="GenealogyBank">{{cite web |url=https://www.genealogybank.com/blog/stories-from-the-life-and-death-of-revolutionary-war-hero-enoch-poor.html |title=Stories from the Life and Death of Revolutionary War Hero Enoch Poor |publisher=GenealogyBank |date=October 24, 2017 |access-date=November 7, 2025}}</ref> Enoch received little formal education and was instead apprenticed to a cabinet maker.<ref name="Bailey1880">{{cite book |last=Bailey |first=Sarah Loring |title=Historical sketch of the town of Andover, Massachusetts |url=https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/32733/pg32733-images.html |publisher=Project Gutenberg |date=1880 |page=340 |via=Project Gutenberg}}</ref> In 1755, he enlisted as a private in one of the Massachusetts units raised to accompany [[Jeffery Amherst, 1st Baron Amherst|Jeffery Amherst]]'s successful expedition to retake Louisburg during the [[French and Indian War]].<ref name="Bailey1880"/> His unit was also involved in the [[Great Upheaval|expulsion of the Acadians]].<ref name="GenealogyBank"/>
 
===Family and business in Exeter===
After the war, he returned to Andover, eloped with Martha Osgood, and settled in [[Exeter, New Hampshire]], around 1760.<ref name="Bailey1880"/> The elopement was reportedly necessary because Martha's father disapproved of the match.<ref name="AndoverBio">{{cite web |url=https://answers.mhl.org/Andover_Biography_-_Enoch_Poor |title=Andover Biography - Enoch Poor |publisher=Memorial Hall Library |access-date=November 7, 2025}}</ref>
 
In Exeter, Poor leveraged his craft skills to become a successful entrepreneur. He "traded cabinet making for ship building,"<ref name="AndoverBio"/> establishing a shipyard on Water Street along the tidal Squamscott River.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.exeternh.gov/sites/default/files/fileattachments/heritage_commission/page/59182/final_park_street_area_hd_exeter_survey.pdf |title=Historic District: Project Area: 3 |publisher=Exeter, NH |access-date=November 7, 2025 |page=10}}</ref><ref name="Exeter1776">{{cite book |title=Exeter in 1776. Sketches of an old New Hampshire town |url=https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/73/Exeter_in_1776._Sketches_of_an_old_New_Hampshire_town_as_it_was_a_hundred_years_ago._Prepared_for_the_ladies_centennial_levee_held_in_Exeter%2C_Feb._22%2C_1876_%28IA_exeterin1776sket00bellc%29.pdf |publisher=Wikimedia Commons |access-date=November 7, 2025 |page=21}}</ref> He was in business with a partner named Thomas Parsons.<ref name="ExeterHist">{{cite web |url=https://www.exeterhistory.org/historically-speaking/enoch-poor-hs |title=General Enoch Poor |publisher=Exeter Historical Society |access-date=November 7, 2025}}</ref> This venture was successful enough to position him for a leadership role in the colony.<ref name="Bailey1880"/><ref name="TEHS">{{cite web |url=https://www.tehistory.org/hqda/html/v28/v28n1p003.html |title=Charles Lee - TEHS - Quarterly Archives |publisher=Tredyffrin Easttown Historical Society |access-date=November 7, 2025}}</ref>
 
Enoch and Martha Poor had two daughters, Martha and Harriet.<ref name="ExeterHist"/> These daughters forged a significant bond within the New Hampshire Line's command structure: Martha Poor married [[Bradbury Cilley]], and Harriet Poor married his brother, Jacob Cilley.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.epsomhistory.com/genealogy/i3638.htm |title=Harriet Poor |publisher=Epsom History |access-date=November 7, 2025}}</ref> Bradbury and Jacob were the sons of Colonel [[Joseph Cilley (state senator)|Joseph Cilley]], who commanded the 1st New Hampshire Regiment while serving alongside Poor.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.montvernonnh.us/america-250/files/14-3-nh-am-rev-colonels-part-2-colonel-enoch-poor |title=14.3 NH Am Rev Colonels Part 2 Colonel Enoch Poor |publisher=Mont Vernon-America 250 |access-date=November 7, 2025}}</ref>
 
==American Revolutionary War==
 
Poor supported the separatists as early as the [[Stamp Act 1765|Stamp Act]] protests in 1765.<ref name="GenealogyBank"/> He served on various committees for Exeter throughout the period of rising rebellion.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.encyclopedia.com/history/encyclopedias-almanacs-transcripts-and-maps/poor-enoch |title=Poor, Enoch |publisher=Encyclopedia.com |access-date=November 7, 2025}}</ref> In 1775, he was twice elected to the New Hampshire Provincial Congress.<ref name="GenealogyBank"/>
 
The [[Battle of Lexington and Concord|Battle of Lexington]] caused the assembly to call for three regiments of militia, and Poor was commissioned colonel of the [[2nd New Hampshire Regiment]] on May 24, 1775.<ref name="AndoverBio"/> While the regiments under colonels [[John Stark]] and [[James Reed (soldier)|James Reed]] were sent to [[Boston]], Poor's 2nd was initially stationed at [[Portsmouth, New Hampshire|Portsmouth]] and Exeter to guard the seacoast.<ref name="GenealogyBank"/> His first assignment was to use his shipbuilding skills to construct "fire rafts" to protect Portsmouth Harbor.<ref name="GenealogyBank"/> They were sent to Boston after the [[Battle of Bunker Hill]], arriving at Winter Hill on June 25, 1775.<ref name="GenealogyBank"/>
 
===Gaining Washington's trust===
In the summer of 1775, the unit was absorbed into the [[Continental Army]].<ref name="GenealogyBank"/> Poor immediately distinguished himself as a professional officer focused on discipline. In September 1775, his superior, Brig. Gen. [[John Sullivan (general)|John Sullivan]], sought to dismiss a charge Colonel Poor had brought against a lieutenant. General Washington deferred to Poor's authority and instructed Sullivan: "return my thanks to Colo. Poor for his vigilance & attention to the Service... if all Officers would use their endeavours to enforce Orders, duty would go smoothly on, & we should soon be a very respectable Army".<ref name="FoundersOnlineWashington">{{cite web |url=https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Washington/03-01-02-0306 |title=George Washington to Brigadier General John Sullivan, 4 September 1775 |publisher=Founders Online, National Archives |access-date=November 7, 2025}}</ref>
 
Poor's regiment was ordered into the Northern Department and went with General [[Richard Montgomery]]'s [[Invasion of Canada (1775)|invasion of Canada]].<ref name="HammondRolls">{{cite book |last=Hammond |first=Isaac W. |editor-last=Hammond |editor-first=Isaac W. |title=Rolls of the Soldiers in the Revolutionary War, 1775, to May, 1777 |url=https://archive.org/details/rollsofsoldiersi01hamm |publisher=Parsons B. Cogswell, State Printer |location=Concord, NH |date=1885 |series=State Papers Series, Vol. 14 |pages=237, 554–555}}</ref><ref name="BelknapHist">{{cite book |last=Belknap |first=Jeremy |title=The History of New-Hampshire, Vol. 2 |url=https://archive.org/details/cu31924095654384 |publisher=Thomas & Andrews |location=Boston |date=1791 |pages=406–407, 425}}</ref> After the disaster in Canada, Poor led the survivors of his regiment in early 1776 back to [[Fort Ticonderoga]].<ref name="GenealogyBank"/> The unit was reorganized as the 8th Continental Regiment and ordered south to join Washington's main army in December 1776, seeing action in the Battles of [[Battle of Trenton|Trenton]] and [[Battle of Princeton|Princeton]].<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.montvernonnh.us/america-250/files/12-introduction-3-nh-american-revolution-colonels |title=American Revolution War: 3 New Hampshire Regiments |publisher=Mont Vernon-America 250 |access-date=November 7, 2025}}</ref>
 
===Saratoga campaign===
 
The [[Continental Congress]] named Poor a brigadier general on February 21, 1777.<ref>Heitman, Francis B., ''Historical Register of Officers of the Continental Army during the War of the Revolution'' (Washington, DC: 1914), p. 446</ref> His new brigade, composed of New Hampshire and New York regiments, was sent back to Ticonderoga.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.encyclopedia.com/history/encyclopedias-almanacs-transcripts-and-maps/poor-enoch |title=Poor, Enoch |publisher=Encyclopedia.com |access-date=November 7, 2025}}</ref> He withdrew with the rest of [[Arthur St. Clair]]'s force on July 5. Moving south, they joined General [[Horatio Gates]] before the [[Battle of Saratoga]], and his brigade was expanded by two regiments of [[Connecticut]] militia ([[Cook's Regiment of Militia|Cook's]] and [[Latimer's Regiment of Militia|Latimer's]]).
 
In the [[Battle of Freeman's Farm]], Poor's brigade was dispatched to support [[Daniel Morgan]]'s riflemen, holding the American left flank in a heated firefight.<ref name="GenealogyBank"/>
 
In the [[Battle of Bemis Heights]], Poor's brigade was in General [[Benjamin Lincoln]]'s division. They faced the British left flank, composed of elite British grenadiers commanded by Major [[John Dyke Acland]]. British artillery from the heights flew over the heads of Poor's men.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://saratoganygenweb.com/batlpo.htm |title=SARATOGA NATIONAL HISTORICAL PARK |publisher=Saratoga NYGenWeb |access-date=November 7, 2025}}</ref> Acland led the grenadiers in a bayonet charge.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.battlefields.org/learn/articles/battle-bemis-heights |title=The Battle of Bemis Heights |publisher=American Battlefield Trust |access-date=November 7, 2025}}</ref> Poor  ordered his 1,400 men to hold their fire until the charge was at point-blank range. The resulting volley was devastating; it "cut Acland's men to pieces," wounded Acland in both legs, and shattered the British attack, initiating the collapse of Burgoyne's entire line.<ref name="EncycloBemis">{{cite web |url=https://www.encyclopedia.com/history/encyclopedias-almanacs-transcripts-and-maps/poor-enoch |title=Poor, Enoch |publisher=Encyclopedia.com |access-date=November 7, 2025}}</ref><ref name="GenealogyBank"/> The Americans captured the wounded Acland and Major Williams along with the column's artillery.<ref name="BelknapSaratoga">{{cite book |last=Belknap |first=Jeremy |title=The History of New-Hampshire, Vol. 2 |url=https://archive.org/details/cu31924095654384 |publisher=Thomas & Andrews |location=Boston |date=1791 |page=440}}</ref> Poor then turned to his left and gave support to [[Ebenezer Learned]] and Morgan's men.
 
===Valley Forge and later service===
 
Poor's brigade spent the winter of 1777–1778 at [[Valley Forge]].<ref name="GenealogyBank"/> He led the last maneuvers in the [[Battle of Monmouth]] on June 28, 1778, after his brigade, as part of [[Charles Lee (general)|Charles Lee]]'s advance force, retreated and re-formed under Washington's direct command.<ref name="GenealogyBank"/><ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/GOVPUB-D114-PURL-gpo235933/pdf/GOVPUB-D114-PURL-gpo235933.pdf |title=Valley Forge to Monmouth, 1778 |publisher=U.S. Army |access-date=November 7, 2025 |page=10}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://revwar75.com/library/rees/monmouth/MonmouthD.htm |title=Washington's Main Army Order of Battle, 28 June 1778 |publisher=RevWar'75 |access-date=November 7, 2025}}</ref>
 
====Valley Forge and the Conway Cabal====
During the [[Conway Cabal]], a period of political intrigue where some officers and members of Congress schemed to replace Washington with [[Horatio Gates]], Poor's loyalty remained firm.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.americanhistorycentral.com/entries/horatio-gates/ |title=Horatio Gates, Biography, Facts, Significance |publisher=American History Central |access-date=November 7, 2025}}</ref> While Gates, the hero of Saratoga, was bypassing Washington to communicate directly with Congress,<ref>{{cite web |url=https://medium.com/@bourbonbattles/horatio-gates-sucks-c11153c00425 |title=The Case Against Horatio |publisher=Medium |access-date=November 7, 2025}}</ref> Poor—one of the actual field commanders responsible for the victory—was engaged in different correspondence. He wrote desperate letters to the New Hampshire Council, not for political advantage, but to beg for supplies for his men: "Did you know how much your men suffered from want of shirts, Britches, Blankitts, Stockens. & shoes, your heart would ache for them".<ref>{{cite web |url=https://npshistory.com/publications/vafo/vfr-2.pdf |title=VALLEY FORGE HISTORICAL RESEARCH REPORT |publisher=NPS History |access-date=November 7, 2025 |page=132}}</ref> Like much of Washington's officer corps, Poor "froze out" the political generals like Conway.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://allthingsliberty.com/2019/07/a-generals-funeral-the-burial-of-enoch-poor-revisted/ |title=A General's Funeral: The Burial of Enoch Poor Revisited |publisher=Journal of the American Revolution |date=July 22, 2019 |access-date=November 7, 2025}}</ref>
 
====Sullivan Expedition and Culper Spy Ring====
He accompanied the [[Sullivan Expedition]] in 1779, leading his brigade on a difficult flanking march to win the [[Battle of Newtown]].<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.mountvernon.org/library/digitalhistory/digital-encyclopedia/article/battle-of-newtown |title=Battle of Newtown |publisher=George Washington's Mount Vernon |access-date=November 7, 2025}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://armyhistory.org/the-battle-of-newtown-august-29-1779-an-aggressive-attack-carried-out-with-audacity/ |title=The Battle of Newtown, August 29, 1779 |publisher=Army History |date=September 30, 2019 |access-date=November 7, 2025}}</ref>


==Biography==
In 1780, Poor was given a prestigious command in [[Marquis de Lafayette|Lafayette's]] elite [[Light infantry|Division of Light Infantry]].<ref name="AndoverBio"/> That February, Washington entrusted Poor with a secret and sensitive mission. From his Morristown headquarters, Washington wrote to Poor requesting he "select... one from the troops under your command" for a "particular service." The man had to "be depended upon for his fidelity," be "acquainted with the use of Oars," and "must be a Native."<ref name="FoundersOnlineCulper">{{cite web |url=https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Washington/03-24-02-0322 |title=George Washington to Brigadier General Enoch Poor, 7 February 1780 |publisher=Founders Online, National Archives |access-date=November 7, 2025}}</ref> Annotations for this letter confirm the man was being recruited by Major [[Benjamin Tallmadge]] for the [[Culper Spy Ring]], Washington's most vital intelligence network in New York.<ref name="FoundersOnlineCulper"/>


Poor was born and raised in [[Andover, Massachusetts|Andover]], [[Province of Massachusetts Bay]]. His father Thomas Poor had been part of the 1745 expedition that captured [[Louisburg, Nova Scotia]], during [[King George's War]]. In 1755, Poor enlisted as a private in one of the Massachusetts units raised to accompany [[Jeffery Amherst, 1st Baron Amherst|Jeffery Amherst]]'s expedition to retake Louisburg during the [[French and Indian War]]. His unit enforced the [[Great Upheaval|expulsion of the Acadians]]. After the war, he came home to Andover, but only briefly. He eloped with Martha Osgood, and they settled in Exeter where he became a successful ship builder.
==Death==


Poor supported the separatists as early as the [[Stamp Act 1765|Stamp Act]] protests in 1765. He served on various committees for Exeter throughout the period of rising rebellion. In 1775, he was twice elected to the provincial Assembly. The [[Battle of Lexington and Concord|Battle of Lexington]] caused the assembly to call for three regiments of militia, and Poor became the colonel of the [[2nd New Hampshire Regiment]]. The other regiments under colonels [[John Stark]] and [[James Reed (soldier)|James Reed]] were sent to [[Boston]], but the 2nd was stationed at [[Portsmouth, New Hampshire|Portsmouth]] and Exeter. They were sent to Boston after the [[Battle of Bunker Hill]], arriving on June 25. In the summer of 1775, the unit was absorbed into the [[Continental Army]]; they were ordered into the Northern Department and went with General [[Richard Montgomery]]'s [[Invasion of Canada (1775)|invasion of Canada]].
In September 1780, Poor died suddenly at age 44 while encamped with Lafayette's division in [[Hackensack, New Jersey]].<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.hackensack.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/1976_History_Book.pdf |title=HACKENSACK - HERITAGE TO HORIZONS |publisher=Hackensack, NJ |access-date=November 7, 2025 |page=54}}</ref>


After the disaster in Canada, Poor led the survivors of his regiment in early 1776 back to [[Fort Ticonderoga]]. The unit was renamed as the 8th Continental regiment and joined Washington's main army in December 1776 at winter quarters near [[Morristown, New Jersey]].
The official cause of death, as reported by the army's high command and medical staff, was unanimous: typhus, which was then termed "putrid fever" or "bilious fever."<ref name="GenealogyBank"/>
*Dr. James Thacher, a surgeon in the Continental Army, stated in his journal that Poor died from typhus or "putrid fever."<ref name="GenealogyBank"/>
*Lieutenant Colonel Henry Dearborn, in his journal dated September 9, 1780, wrote: "this evining ye Honbe. Brigadeer Genl. Poor departed this life after labouring under a severe bilious fever 13 days".<ref name="FoggDeposition">{{cite web |url=https://allthingsliberty.com/2019/07/a-generals-funeral-the-burial-of-enoch-poor-revisted/ |title=A General’s Funeral: The Burial of Enoch Poor Revisited |publisher=Journal of the American Revolution |date=July 22, 2019 |access-date=November 7, 2025}}</ref>
*Lieutenant Colonel David Humphreys, Washington's aide-de-camp, wrote on September 10: "Genl Poor who Died of a fever is to be buried this day".<ref name="FoggDeposition"/>


[[Image:EnochPoor4Statue.JPG|thumb|left|160px|The monument to Gen. Poor, just a few feet from his burial site in [[Hackensack, New Jersey]]]]
The most conclusive evidence comes from Major Jeremiah Fogg, Poor's own aide-de-camp. In January 1781, Fogg became so incensed by duel rumors that he swore a legal deposition. He testified that he "attended him constantly during his last Sickness," that his death "was solely occasioned by a Bilious Fever, after thirteen Days Illness," and, critically, that he "assisted in laying out his Corps, and did not perceive that he had ever been wounded".<ref name="FoggDeposition"/>


The [[Continental Congress]] named Poor a brigadier general on February 21, 1777.<ref>Heitman, Francis B., ''Historical Register of Officers of the Continental Army during the War of the Revolution'' (Washington, DC: 1914), p. 446</ref> That spring, his brigade was sent back to Ticonderoga. He withdrew with the rest of [[Arthur St. Clair]]'s force of July 5. Moving south, they joined General [[Horatio Gates]] before the [[Battle of Saratoga]], and his brigade was expanded by two regiments of [[Connecticut]] militia ([[Cook's Regiment of Militia|Cook's]] and [[Latimer's Regiment of Militia|Latimer's]]).
Despite this evidence, a rumor of a duel has persisted. The only known contemporary source for a duel is the journal of Private Elijah Fisher, who wrote: "The 8th. Gen. Poor died. he receved his wound by fiteing a duel with a Major".<ref name="AndoverBio"/><ref>{{Cite web |last=Fisher |first=Elijah |date=1780 |title=Journal of Elijah Fisher |url=https://play.google.com/books/reader?id=KO0QAQAAMAAJ&pg=GBS.PA15-IA1&hl=en |access-date=November 28, 2022 |website=Journal of Elijah Fisher}}</ref> This camp rumor evolved in the 19th century into two contradictory "cover-up" theories. One theory, from the New Hampshire Adjutant-General's report, claimed he was killed by a "French officer," which was covered up to protect the U.S.-French alliance.<ref name="AndoverBio"/> Another, published by the Massachusetts Historical Society in 1881, claimed he was mortally wounded by Major John Porter of the 13th Massachusetts, who was then "relieved of his command."<ref name="AndoverBio"/><ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.newenglandhistoricalsociety.com/mysterious-death-new-hampshires-enoch-poor-revolutionary-war-hero/ |title=The Mysterious Death of New Hampshire's Enoch Poor, Revolutionary War Hero |website=newenglandhistoricalsociety.com |date=6 September 2014 |access-date=July 4, 2020}}</ref>


In the [[Battle of Freeman's Farm]], Poor's brigade was the first to come to the aid of [[Daniel Morgan]]'s attack. Poor held the American left flank, extending into the woods and even wrapping around the British position. They performed well, keeping General [[Simon Fraser of Balnain|Simon Fraser]]'s regulars engaged while [[Benedict Arnold]] led attacks on the central column.
This latter theory is demonstrably false. Porter's service records show he was *not* dismissed in 1780; he remained with the army and was discharged two years later, in October 1782, for an "unauthorized trip to Europe," an offense entirely unrelated to a duel.<ref name="FoggDeposition"/> The duel myth persists, however, and is repeated on some historical markers.<ref name="ExeterHist"/>


In the [[Battle of Bemis Heights]], Poor's brigade was in General [[Benjamin Lincoln]]'s division on the western end of the American line. They were closest to the center of the advancing British, so they came under fire from the grenadier battalion of the British center. The fire was ineffective, so Major [[John Dyke Acland]] led the grenadiers in a bayonet charge. Poor held fire until they came very close, then opened up with the massed fire of his 1,400 men. These were the first American shots in the battle. The charge was completely broken, and Acland himself fell wounded. With this collapse of Burgoyne's center, the Americans captured the wounded Acland and Major Williams along with the column's artillery. Poor then turned to his left and gave support to [[Ebenezer Learned]] and Morgan's men.
==Legacy==
[[Image:EnochPoor4Statue.JPG|thumb|right|The monument to Gen. Poor, just a few feet from his burial site in [[Hackensack, New Jersey]]]]
[[Image:EnochPoor3Grave.JPG|thumb|left|Poor's burial site. The inscription includes: ''In 1824, Lafayette re visited this grave, and turning away much affected, exclaimed, Ah, that was one of my Generals.'']]


[[Image:EnochPoor3Grave.JPG|thumb|180px|Poor's burial site. The inscription includes: ''In 1824, Lafayette re visited this grave, and turning away much affected, exclaimed, Ah, that was one of my Generals.'']]
Poor's death was met with profound grief. Washington's General Orders for September 9, 1780, announced: "Brigadier General Poor will be interred tomorrow afternoon at Hackensack Church; the funeral procession will commence at four o'clock from Brower's house".<ref>{{cite web |url=https://allthingsliberty.com/2016/05/a-generals-funeral-the-burial-of-enoch-poor/ |title=A General's Funeral: The Burial of Enoch Poor |publisher=Journal of the American Revolution |date=May 17, 2016 |access-date=November 7, 2025}}</ref>


Poor's brigade again spent the winter with the main army, this time at [[Valley Forge]]. He led the last maneuvers in the [[Battle of Monmouth]] on June 28, 1778. He accompanied the [[Sullivan Expedition]] in 1779, leading a brigade in the victory at [[Battle of Newtown]].
He was buried with full military honors in the [[First Reformed Dutch Church, Hackensack|First Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery]] in Hackensack.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.revolutionarywarnewjersey.com/new_jersey_revolutionary_war_sites/towns/hackensack_nj_revolutionary_war_sites.htm |title=Hackensack, New Jersey Revolutionary War Sites |website=Revolutionary War New Jersey |access-date=November 4, 2025}}</ref> [[George Washington]] and Lafayette both attended his funeral.<ref name="HackensackHistory">{{cite web |url=https://www.hackensack.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/1976_History_Book.pdf |title=HACKENSACK - HERITAGE TO HORIZONS |publisher=Hackensack, NJ |access-date=November 7, 2025 |page=54}}</ref> Washington wrote to inform Congress, stating that Poor "was an officer of distinguished merit, one who as a citizen and soldier had every claim to the esteem and regard of his country."<ref name="GenealogyBank"/>


Afterward Poor was assigned to [[Marquis de Lafayette|Lafayette's]] division and mainly saw garrison duty in [[New Jersey]]. Some sources say that Poor was shot in a duel near [[Hackensack, New Jersey]], on September 6, 1780, and died two days later from the wound, (according to the journal of soldier Elijah Fisher, Poor was in a duel with "a Major" and died two days later.)<ref>{{Cite web |last=Fisher |first=Elijah |date=1780 |title=Journal of Elijah Fisher |url=https://play.google.com/books/reader?id=KO0QAQAAMAAJ&pg=GBS.PA15-IA1&hl=en |archive-url= |access-date=November 28, 2022 |website=Journal of Elijah Fisher}}</ref><ref>The officer was Major John Porter [Yale 1770; Harvard 1777] of the 13th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment. The cause of the duel was "His regiment subsequently rejoined Washington's army on the Hudson, and late in August, 1780, while on a march near Hackensack, New Jersey, he came under the censure of his superior officer. Brigadier General Enoch Poor, of New Hampshire. The General uttered his criticisms in the hearing of Major Porter's men, and when challenged waived the privileges of his rank ; a duel followed between the two officers, resulting in General Poor's death. The affair was hushed up, and Major Porter continued in the service until December, 1781, when he was granted a furlough, from which he did not return..." Yale Biographies Class of 1770 Vol 3 pp.392-393]</ref> although the Army surgeon reported that he died from [[typhus]].<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.newenglandhistoricalsociety.com/mysterious-death-new-hampshires-enoch-poor-revolutionary-war-hero/ |title=The Mysterious Death of New Hampshire's Enoch Poor, Revolutionary War Hero |website=newenglandhistoricalsociety.com |date=6 September 2014 |access-date=July 4, 2020}}</ref> He was buried in the [[First Reformed Dutch Church, Hackensack|First Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery]] in Hackensack.<ref>[http://www.revolutionarywarnewjersey.com/new_jersey_revolutionary_war_sites/towns/hackensack_nj_revolutionary_war_sites.htm Revolutionary War New Jersey]</ref> [[George Washington]] and Lafayette both attended his funeral, and Washington wrote to inform Congress of Poor's death. He noted that "he was an officer of distinguished merit, one who as a citizen and soldier had every claim to the esteem and regard of his country."
In 1824, during his grand tour of the United States, the Marquis de Lafayette made a special visit to Hackensack to visit the grave of his former comrade. Turning away with tears in his eyes, he exclaimed, "Ah, that was one of my Generals!".<ref>{{cite web |url=https://visitingamuseum.com/tag/downtown-hackensack/ |title=Downtown Hackensack |publisher=Visiting a Museum |access-date=November 7, 2025}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.bergencountyhistory.org/_files/ugd/6adfb1_2752240cdc914af2a35f1c38a0e52d2c.pdf?index=true |title=The Nation's Guest: General Lafayette's Return Visit, 1824-25 |publisher=Bergen County Historical Society |access-date=November 7, 2025}}</ref>


==See also==
==See also==
{{Portal|New Hampshire}}
* [[List of New Hampshire historical markers (126–150)#131|New Hampshire Historical Marker No. 131]]: Brigadier General Enoch Poor
* [[List of New Hampshire historical markers (126–150)#131|New Hampshire Historical Marker No. 131]]: Brigadier General Enoch Poor



Latest revision as of 01:09, 28 December 2025

Template:Short description Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Enoch Poor (June 21, 1736 (Old Style) – September 8, 1780) was a brigadier general in the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War. He began his life as an apprentice cabinet maker but rose through competence to become a successful ship builder and merchant from Exeter, New Hampshire. Over five years of continuous service, he became one of George Washington's most trusted and reliable brigade commanders.[1]

Early life and career

Poor was born and raised in Andover, Province of Massachusetts Bay. His father Thomas Poor had been part of the 1745 expedition that captured Louisburg, Nova Scotia, during King George's War.[2] Enoch received little formal education and was instead apprenticed to a cabinet maker.[3] In 1755, he enlisted as a private in one of the Massachusetts units raised to accompany Jeffery Amherst's successful expedition to retake Louisburg during the French and Indian War.[3] His unit was also involved in the expulsion of the Acadians.[2]

Family and business in Exeter

After the war, he returned to Andover, eloped with Martha Osgood, and settled in Exeter, New Hampshire, around 1760.[3] The elopement was reportedly necessary because Martha's father disapproved of the match.[4]

In Exeter, Poor leveraged his craft skills to become a successful entrepreneur. He "traded cabinet making for ship building,"[4] establishing a shipyard on Water Street along the tidal Squamscott River.[5][6] He was in business with a partner named Thomas Parsons.[7] This venture was successful enough to position him for a leadership role in the colony.[3][8]

Enoch and Martha Poor had two daughters, Martha and Harriet.[7] These daughters forged a significant bond within the New Hampshire Line's command structure: Martha Poor married Bradbury Cilley, and Harriet Poor married his brother, Jacob Cilley.[9] Bradbury and Jacob were the sons of Colonel Joseph Cilley, who commanded the 1st New Hampshire Regiment while serving alongside Poor.[10]

American Revolutionary War

Poor supported the separatists as early as the Stamp Act protests in 1765.[2] He served on various committees for Exeter throughout the period of rising rebellion.[11] In 1775, he was twice elected to the New Hampshire Provincial Congress.[2]

The Battle of Lexington caused the assembly to call for three regiments of militia, and Poor was commissioned colonel of the 2nd New Hampshire Regiment on May 24, 1775.[4] While the regiments under colonels John Stark and James Reed were sent to Boston, Poor's 2nd was initially stationed at Portsmouth and Exeter to guard the seacoast.[2] His first assignment was to use his shipbuilding skills to construct "fire rafts" to protect Portsmouth Harbor.[2] They were sent to Boston after the Battle of Bunker Hill, arriving at Winter Hill on June 25, 1775.[2]

Gaining Washington's trust

In the summer of 1775, the unit was absorbed into the Continental Army.[2] Poor immediately distinguished himself as a professional officer focused on discipline. In September 1775, his superior, Brig. Gen. John Sullivan, sought to dismiss a charge Colonel Poor had brought against a lieutenant. General Washington deferred to Poor's authority and instructed Sullivan: "return my thanks to Colo. Poor for his vigilance & attention to the Service... if all Officers would use their endeavours to enforce Orders, duty would go smoothly on, & we should soon be a very respectable Army".[12]

Poor's regiment was ordered into the Northern Department and went with General Richard Montgomery's invasion of Canada.[13][14] After the disaster in Canada, Poor led the survivors of his regiment in early 1776 back to Fort Ticonderoga.[2] The unit was reorganized as the 8th Continental Regiment and ordered south to join Washington's main army in December 1776, seeing action in the Battles of Trenton and Princeton.[15]

Saratoga campaign

The Continental Congress named Poor a brigadier general on February 21, 1777.[16] His new brigade, composed of New Hampshire and New York regiments, was sent back to Ticonderoga.[17] He withdrew with the rest of Arthur St. Clair's force on July 5. Moving south, they joined General Horatio Gates before the Battle of Saratoga, and his brigade was expanded by two regiments of Connecticut militia (Cook's and Latimer's).

In the Battle of Freeman's Farm, Poor's brigade was dispatched to support Daniel Morgan's riflemen, holding the American left flank in a heated firefight.[2]

In the Battle of Bemis Heights, Poor's brigade was in General Benjamin Lincoln's division. They faced the British left flank, composed of elite British grenadiers commanded by Major John Dyke Acland. British artillery from the heights flew over the heads of Poor's men.[18] Acland led the grenadiers in a bayonet charge.[19] Poor ordered his 1,400 men to hold their fire until the charge was at point-blank range. The resulting volley was devastating; it "cut Acland's men to pieces," wounded Acland in both legs, and shattered the British attack, initiating the collapse of Burgoyne's entire line.[20][2] The Americans captured the wounded Acland and Major Williams along with the column's artillery.[21] Poor then turned to his left and gave support to Ebenezer Learned and Morgan's men.

Valley Forge and later service

Poor's brigade spent the winter of 1777–1778 at Valley Forge.[2] He led the last maneuvers in the Battle of Monmouth on June 28, 1778, after his brigade, as part of Charles Lee's advance force, retreated and re-formed under Washington's direct command.[2][22][23]

Valley Forge and the Conway Cabal

During the Conway Cabal, a period of political intrigue where some officers and members of Congress schemed to replace Washington with Horatio Gates, Poor's loyalty remained firm.[24] While Gates, the hero of Saratoga, was bypassing Washington to communicate directly with Congress,[25] Poor—one of the actual field commanders responsible for the victory—was engaged in different correspondence. He wrote desperate letters to the New Hampshire Council, not for political advantage, but to beg for supplies for his men: "Did you know how much your men suffered from want of shirts, Britches, Blankitts, Stockens. & shoes, your heart would ache for them".[26] Like much of Washington's officer corps, Poor "froze out" the political generals like Conway.[27]

Sullivan Expedition and Culper Spy Ring

He accompanied the Sullivan Expedition in 1779, leading his brigade on a difficult flanking march to win the Battle of Newtown.[28][29]

In 1780, Poor was given a prestigious command in Lafayette's elite Division of Light Infantry.[4] That February, Washington entrusted Poor with a secret and sensitive mission. From his Morristown headquarters, Washington wrote to Poor requesting he "select... one from the troops under your command" for a "particular service." The man had to "be depended upon for his fidelity," be "acquainted with the use of Oars," and "must be a Native."[30] Annotations for this letter confirm the man was being recruited by Major Benjamin Tallmadge for the Culper Spy Ring, Washington's most vital intelligence network in New York.[30]

Death

In September 1780, Poor died suddenly at age 44 while encamped with Lafayette's division in Hackensack, New Jersey.[31]

The official cause of death, as reported by the army's high command and medical staff, was unanimous: typhus, which was then termed "putrid fever" or "bilious fever."[2]

  • Dr. James Thacher, a surgeon in the Continental Army, stated in his journal that Poor died from typhus or "putrid fever."[2]
  • Lieutenant Colonel Henry Dearborn, in his journal dated September 9, 1780, wrote: "this evining ye Honbe. Brigadeer Genl. Poor departed this life after labouring under a severe bilious fever 13 days".[32]
  • Lieutenant Colonel David Humphreys, Washington's aide-de-camp, wrote on September 10: "Genl Poor who Died of a fever is to be buried this day".[32]

The most conclusive evidence comes from Major Jeremiah Fogg, Poor's own aide-de-camp. In January 1781, Fogg became so incensed by duel rumors that he swore a legal deposition. He testified that he "attended him constantly during his last Sickness," that his death "was solely occasioned by a Bilious Fever, after thirteen Days Illness," and, critically, that he "assisted in laying out his Corps, and did not perceive that he had ever been wounded".[32]

Despite this evidence, a rumor of a duel has persisted. The only known contemporary source for a duel is the journal of Private Elijah Fisher, who wrote: "The 8th. Gen. Poor died. he receved his wound by fiteing a duel with a Major".[4][33] This camp rumor evolved in the 19th century into two contradictory "cover-up" theories. One theory, from the New Hampshire Adjutant-General's report, claimed he was killed by a "French officer," which was covered up to protect the U.S.-French alliance.[4] Another, published by the Massachusetts Historical Society in 1881, claimed he was mortally wounded by Major John Porter of the 13th Massachusetts, who was then "relieved of his command."[4][34]

This latter theory is demonstrably false. Porter's service records show he was *not* dismissed in 1780; he remained with the army and was discharged two years later, in October 1782, for an "unauthorized trip to Europe," an offense entirely unrelated to a duel.[32] The duel myth persists, however, and is repeated on some historical markers.[7]

Legacy

File:EnochPoor4Statue.JPG
The monument to Gen. Poor, just a few feet from his burial site in Hackensack, New Jersey
File:EnochPoor3Grave.JPG
Poor's burial site. The inscription includes: In 1824, Lafayette re visited this grave, and turning away much affected, exclaimed, Ah, that was one of my Generals.

Poor's death was met with profound grief. Washington's General Orders for September 9, 1780, announced: "Brigadier General Poor will be interred tomorrow afternoon at Hackensack Church; the funeral procession will commence at four o'clock from Brower's house".[35]

He was buried with full military honors in the First Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery in Hackensack.[36] George Washington and Lafayette both attended his funeral.[37] Washington wrote to inform Congress, stating that Poor "was an officer of distinguished merit, one who as a citizen and soldier had every claim to the esteem and regard of his country."[2]

In 1824, during his grand tour of the United States, the Marquis de Lafayette made a special visit to Hackensack to visit the grave of his former comrade. Turning away with tears in his eyes, he exclaimed, "Ah, that was one of my Generals!".[38][39]

See also

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References

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  16. Heitman, Francis B., Historical Register of Officers of the Continental Army during the War of the Revolution (Washington, DC: 1914), p. 446
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External links

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