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COL George “Santiago Clamorgan” Morgan

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COL George “Santiago Clamorgan” Morgan Veteran

Birth
Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania, USA
Death
10 Mar 1810 (aged 67)
Morganza, Washington County, Pennsylvania, USA
Burial
Washington, Washington County, Pennsylvania, USA GPS-Latitude: 40.1610989, Longitude: -80.255318
Memorial ID
View Source
India Trader, Indian Agent for Western Department, Served in continental Army as a Colonel headquartered at Fort Pitt
Husband of Mary (Baynton) Morgan

-------------------------
DIED
On the March, in the 62th year of his age, Colonel George MORGAN of Morganza.

Few men of the present day, so richly merit the tribute of obituary respect, as he, who is the subject of the above melancholy record. The characters who in '75 full of ardor and of youth, rushed forward in crowds, to stem the oppression of England, are now but thinly scattered over the union; like the leaves of autumn, they are daily dropping off, and in a few years, we shall have nothing left but their example, and may we not weld ???, their spirit - The truly respectable subject of this sketch was among the first of those patriots.

At the early age of 21, Mr. Morgan, then the youngest of one of the first mercantile houses, in the colonies, tore himself from the arms of an accomplished and lovely wife, to whom he had just been united, and banning ??? with the spirit of useful enterprise, traversed the gloomy wilds that then separated Philadelphia from the Ohio. He arrived in Pittsburgh in the year 1763 [??? or 1765], when it was scarcely more than an Indian village; his views were commercial, in the prosecution of which he descended the river, explored the Illinois, and returned to Philadelphia by the way of New-Orleans. The consequence of this journey was the establishment of an extensive trade with the western parts of American and the Spanish colonies; in the pursuit of these plans, he made frequent visits to Louisiana and the Floridas, and became intimately versed in the habits and manners of the numerous tribes of aborigines who then thickly hovered on the north western frontier ---

From the sound judgment and benevolent policy which he displayed is those relations, he required that popularity and knowledge, which so certainty qualified him for the many important offices he filled, in the west, during the storm of the revolution.

In the year ___ he founded New-Madrid, at the request of the Spanish government, and with the permission of his own [government].

He was first lieutenant in the first volunteer company, that was raised in Pennsylvania, commanded by General Cadwalader [sic]; he was shortly after promoted to the command.

In April '76 he was sent by Congress to Pittsburgh, with the important appointment of "agent for Indian affairs for the middle department".

In '77 he received the commission of the Colonel in the army of the United States, and was offered an important command to the north, which he wished to accept, but he was induced to relinquish it at the request of Congress that he would bestow his exertions on the arduous task of preserving tranquility on the Indian frontiers; they viewed him as pre-eminently qualified for the serious trust, and in the latter end of '77 he accepted the commission of "deputy commissary general for the western district in the armies of the United States". In this station the journals fo the house of Congress bear the fullest testimonials of his ability and integrity. The different treaties he concluded with the various tribes evince a heart replete with patriotism and benevolence.
In '86 he was elected a member of the "American Philosophical Society"

Though he bore his part in the military scenes of our country with a genius surpassed by few, yet his mind was more in unison with the peaceful pursuits of life. As a farmer he has shown conspicuous; his whole soul was at one period devoted to improvements in cultivation. He was one of the original founders of the Pennsylvania Agricultural Society, and had the satisfaction of receiving the first gold medal ever awarded in America as the reward of agricultural invention; in the prosecution of his schemes, he was restricted by no contracted notions of expense or trouble, he looked forward not to the immediate increase of his own fortune, but to an honest fame and the improvement of this country. He was an honorary member of all the "Agricultural Societies" of his day. At an advanced age he removed to the western country, and closed the evening of his useful life in the bosom of an affectionate family, leaving the amiable partner of 46 years, to mourn his loss.
----------------

Colonel George Morgan served under General George Washington. He was also a slave trader for his family business Bayton Co.and was also called Santiago Clamorgan because of his business in Santiago, Cuba. His business with the Spanish there helped him obtain a Spanish land grant in New Madrid for approximately 1 million acres of land. See records for The Clamorgan Land Association. Clamorgan was the original name of Morgans family from Wales. Clamorgan sold his grant properties to Jacques Chouteau of Saint Louis before he died. He left his home Morganza in Pennsylvania to his son John Morgan. George Morgan was questioned about his Spanish properties in the famous Aaron Burr Treason Trial.
India Trader, Indian Agent for Western Department, Served in continental Army as a Colonel headquartered at Fort Pitt
Husband of Mary (Baynton) Morgan

-------------------------
DIED
On the March, in the 62th year of his age, Colonel George MORGAN of Morganza.

Few men of the present day, so richly merit the tribute of obituary respect, as he, who is the subject of the above melancholy record. The characters who in '75 full of ardor and of youth, rushed forward in crowds, to stem the oppression of England, are now but thinly scattered over the union; like the leaves of autumn, they are daily dropping off, and in a few years, we shall have nothing left but their example, and may we not weld ???, their spirit - The truly respectable subject of this sketch was among the first of those patriots.

At the early age of 21, Mr. Morgan, then the youngest of one of the first mercantile houses, in the colonies, tore himself from the arms of an accomplished and lovely wife, to whom he had just been united, and banning ??? with the spirit of useful enterprise, traversed the gloomy wilds that then separated Philadelphia from the Ohio. He arrived in Pittsburgh in the year 1763 [??? or 1765], when it was scarcely more than an Indian village; his views were commercial, in the prosecution of which he descended the river, explored the Illinois, and returned to Philadelphia by the way of New-Orleans. The consequence of this journey was the establishment of an extensive trade with the western parts of American and the Spanish colonies; in the pursuit of these plans, he made frequent visits to Louisiana and the Floridas, and became intimately versed in the habits and manners of the numerous tribes of aborigines who then thickly hovered on the north western frontier ---

From the sound judgment and benevolent policy which he displayed is those relations, he required that popularity and knowledge, which so certainty qualified him for the many important offices he filled, in the west, during the storm of the revolution.

In the year ___ he founded New-Madrid, at the request of the Spanish government, and with the permission of his own [government].

He was first lieutenant in the first volunteer company, that was raised in Pennsylvania, commanded by General Cadwalader [sic]; he was shortly after promoted to the command.

In April '76 he was sent by Congress to Pittsburgh, with the important appointment of "agent for Indian affairs for the middle department".

In '77 he received the commission of the Colonel in the army of the United States, and was offered an important command to the north, which he wished to accept, but he was induced to relinquish it at the request of Congress that he would bestow his exertions on the arduous task of preserving tranquility on the Indian frontiers; they viewed him as pre-eminently qualified for the serious trust, and in the latter end of '77 he accepted the commission of "deputy commissary general for the western district in the armies of the United States". In this station the journals fo the house of Congress bear the fullest testimonials of his ability and integrity. The different treaties he concluded with the various tribes evince a heart replete with patriotism and benevolence.
In '86 he was elected a member of the "American Philosophical Society"

Though he bore his part in the military scenes of our country with a genius surpassed by few, yet his mind was more in unison with the peaceful pursuits of life. As a farmer he has shown conspicuous; his whole soul was at one period devoted to improvements in cultivation. He was one of the original founders of the Pennsylvania Agricultural Society, and had the satisfaction of receiving the first gold medal ever awarded in America as the reward of agricultural invention; in the prosecution of his schemes, he was restricted by no contracted notions of expense or trouble, he looked forward not to the immediate increase of his own fortune, but to an honest fame and the improvement of this country. He was an honorary member of all the "Agricultural Societies" of his day. At an advanced age he removed to the western country, and closed the evening of his useful life in the bosom of an affectionate family, leaving the amiable partner of 46 years, to mourn his loss.
----------------

Colonel George Morgan served under General George Washington. He was also a slave trader for his family business Bayton Co.and was also called Santiago Clamorgan because of his business in Santiago, Cuba. His business with the Spanish there helped him obtain a Spanish land grant in New Madrid for approximately 1 million acres of land. See records for The Clamorgan Land Association. Clamorgan was the original name of Morgans family from Wales. Clamorgan sold his grant properties to Jacques Chouteau of Saint Louis before he died. He left his home Morganza in Pennsylvania to his son John Morgan. George Morgan was questioned about his Spanish properties in the famous Aaron Burr Treason Trial.


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