Gordon (Family : Savannah, Ga.)

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Gordon family of Savannah, Ga., included W.W. Gordon, cotton merchant; his wife, Eleanor Lytle Kinzie Gordon (Nelly); her mother, Juliette Magill Kinzie (Mrs. John) of Chicago, author; and their children, especially G. Arthur Gordon, cotton merchant; Juliette Gordon Low (Daisy), founder of the Girl Scouts; and Mabel Gordon Leigh.

Ambrose Gordon (1751-1804) came to Georgia from Monmouth County, N.J., sometime after the Revolutionary War and settled in Augusta. There he married Elizabeth Mead(e). The couple later moved to Savannah. Their son, William Washington (William W.) (1796-1842), was named for Lt. Colonel William Washington, under whom Ambrose served during the war. William W. married Sarah Anderson Stites (1806-1882), daughter of Richard Montgomery and Mary Wayne Stites. William W. was the first graduate of the United States Military Academy from Georgia (1815), a member of the Georgia legislature, mayor of Savannah, and founder and first president of the Central Rail Road and Banking Company (now the Central of Georgia Railroad Company). The children of William W. and Mary were George Anderson (George A.) (1830-1872); William Washington (W. W.) (1834-1912); Eliza Clifford, who married William Henry Stiles; and Gulielma C., who married George Evelyn Harrison of Virginia. George A., a lawyer of Huntsville, Ala., first married Caroline Steenbergen, with whom he had one son. After Caroline's death, he married Ellen Beirne. Beirne Gordon, the son of this marriage, became Uncle W. W.'s partner in business.

W. W. Gordon, a graduate of Yale University, was a cotton factor and commission merchant in Savannah. In the 1850s, he was associated with William Hayes Tison, who established Reed & Tison in Savannah with Elias Reed around 1853. When Reed died, Tison and William Mackay formed Tison & Mackay. This partnership was dissolved in July 1856, and W. W. became a partner with Tison in Tison & Gordon. Tison died in November 1877. In 1883, W. W. established his own firm, W. W. Gordon & Company, with Francis D. Bloodworth and Beirne Gordon as partners. Bloodworth resigned in September 1893. W. W.'s son Arthur joined the firm in that year and became a partner in the early 1900s. W. W. died in 1912, and the firm was reincorporated as Gordon & Company in June 1913. In January 1914, Beirne withdrew, and Arthur took over full ownership. From 1930 to 1934, the firm operated as the Gordon Cotton Company.

W. W. was a member of the Georgia Hussars, a Savannah cavalry troop, and entered the Civil War as a lieutenant. After the war, he served with the Georgia State Cavalry. W. W. served in the Georgia House of Representatives, 1884-1890. He entered the War of 1898 as brigadier general of the United States Volunteers. At the conclusion of the war, he served on the Commission of the United States for Porto Rico, which oversaw the withdrawal of Spanish troops from the island. Although he never again ran for office, he maintained an interest in Georgia Democratic Party politics throughout his life.

In 1857, W. W. married Eleanor (Nelly) Lytle Kinzie (1835-1917) of Chicago, daughter of John Harris and Juliette Augusta Magill Kinzie. Juliette (1806-1870) was the author of The Chicago Massacre, first published in 1844 and later incorporated into her Wau-Bun (1856), which Nelly edited and published again in 1901 and 1912. Nelly also edited The Chicago Massacre for republication in 1912 as The Fort Dearborn Massacre . Nelly wrote Rosemary and Rue (1907) in memory of her daughter Alice and John Kinzie, the Father of Chicago (1910).

W. W. and Nelly's children were Eleanor (Nell) Kinzie (1858-1933); Juliette (Daisy) Magill Kinzie (1860-1927); Sarah Alice (Alice) (1863-1880); William Washington, Jr. (1866-1932); Mabel McLane; and George Arthur (Arthur) (1872-1941).

Eleanor (Nell) Kinzie Gordon (1858-1933), married Richard Wayne Parker, son of Cortlandt Parker, and lived in New Jersey and Washington, D.C., where her husband served in the United States Congress as Republican representative from New Jersey, 1895-1911, 1914-1919, and 1921-1923. Their children were Alice Gordon, Eleanor Wayne, Elizabeth Wolcott, Wayne, and Cortlandt.

Juliette (Daisy) Magill Kinzie Gordon (1860-1927), founder in 1912 of the Girl Scouts of the United States of America, was a poet and painter who married William (Willie) Mackay Low of England. The marriage was extremely unhappy and ended, after much financial maneuvering and emotional distress over Willie's extramarital affairs, with Willie's death in 1905. Daisy was apparently charming and witty, but headstrong and irascible, especially when dealing with her mother. She lost the hearing in her left ear around 1885 and heard only poorly with the right ear in later years.

Sarah Alice (Alice) Gordon (1863-1880) died at a young age while she and Nelly were alone in New York. Alice's death apparently marked her mother's mental condition for many years, causing difficulties in her interactions with her other children, especially Daisy. William Washington Gordon, Jr. (1866-1932) was a lawyer of Savannah, graduate of Yale, and major in the Georgia militia. He married Ellen Buchanan Screven. Their children were William Washington ("B") and Margaret Eleanor (Daisy Doots), who married Samuel C. Lawrence. Mabel McLane Gordon married the Honorable Rowland Charles Frederick Leigh and lived in England with their children Rowland Henry Gordon and Margaret Ethel. Mabel was honored for her relief activities during World War I. She was the chief source of information for the rest of the family, especially Arthur, during Daisy's stormy marriage.

George Arthur (Arthur) Gordon, cotton merchant and civic leader of Savannah, married Margaret McGuire of Richmond, Va. Their children were Mary Stuart (1907- ), George Arthur, Jr. (1912- ), Edward McGuire (b. 1916), and Margaret Eleanor (1923- ). George Arthur, Jr., was a writer, and Edward died of an illness aboard ship during World War II. Arthur, a Yale graduate, was associated with his father in the cotton business. He was also active in the warehousing business, serving as president of the Savannah Warehouse and Compress Company, 1924-1941. In addition, Arthur served as captain in the Georgia State Troops; city alderman, specializing in monitoring police activities, 1907-1911; member of the Savannah Board of Education, 1920-1923; and trustee of the Chatham Academy. He belonged to many civic and social clubs and was a strong Savannah booster. He also was interested in Democratic Party politics at the national, state, and local levels. Arthur was Daisy's chief confidant during her struggles, and he and Mabel carried on a long and detailed correspondence throughout their lives.

Margaret (Peggy) Eleanor Gordon, daughter of George Arthur Gordon and Margaret McGuire, married the Reverend Robert S. Seiler. Between 1963 and 1968, they, along with their three children, lived in Manila, Philippines, while Robert Seiler worked for Church World Service.

(Based on note in the inventory to the Gordon Family Papers, Georgia Historical Society, and other sources.)

From the guide to the Gordon Family Papers, 1810-1968, (Southern Historical Collection)

Archival Resources
Role Title Holding Repository
creatorOf Gordon family papers, 1810-1968. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Library. Southern Historical Collection
creatorOf Gordon family papers, 1802-1946 Georgia Historical Society
Role Title Holding Repository
Relation Name
associatedWith 1st Regiment, Georgia State Troops corporateBody
associatedWith Amy Grenfell person
associatedWith Andrew Low person
associatedWith Arthur Kinzie person
associatedWith Baden-Powell family
associatedWith Baden-Powell of Gilwell, Robert Stephenson Smyth Baden-Powell, Baron, 1857-1941. person
associatedWith Beirne Gordon person
associatedWith Beirne & Gordon corporateBody
associatedWith Belmont corporateBody
associatedWith Central Railroad and Banking Company corporateBody
associatedWith Church World Service corporateBody
associatedWith Colonial Dames corporateBody
associatedWith Commission of the United States of America for Puerto Rico corporateBody
associatedWith Committee on the Memorial to Yale Men Who Fell in the War Between the States corporateBody
associatedWith Confederate States of America. Army corporateBody
associatedWith Eleanor Kinzie Gordon (Nelly) person
associatedWith Fund for the Special Relief of Better Class Belgian Refugees corporateBody
associatedWith George H. Kinzie person
associatedWith George S. Gordon person
associatedWith Georgia Hussars corporateBody
associatedWith Georgia legislature corporateBody
associatedWith Georgia. Militia corporateBody
associatedWith Girl Scouts of the United States of America corporateBody
associatedWith Gordon family
associatedWith Gordon, Eleanor Lytle Kinzie, 1835-1917. person
associatedWith Gordon family. family
correspondedWith Gordon, G. Arthur person
associatedWith Gordon, G. Arthur (George Arthur), 1872-1941. person
associatedWith Gordon, W. W. (William Washington), 1834-1912. person
associatedWith Humes & Gordon corporateBody
associatedWith John Kinzie person
associatedWith Julian Magill person
associatedWith Juliette Kinzie person
associatedWith Juliette Low Memorial Fund corporateBody
associatedWith Kinzie, John H., Mrs., 1806-1870. person
associatedWith Lady Lugard Hospitality Committe corporateBody
correspondedWith Leigh, Mabel Gordon person
associatedWith Leigh, Mabel Gordon. person
associatedWith Low family
hasMember Low, Juliette Gordon, 1860-1927. person
correspondedWith Low, Juliette Gordon (Daisy) person
associatedWith Lusitania corporateBody
associatedWith Margaret Gordon Seiler person
associatedWith Mrs. Bateman person
associatedWith National Cotton Exchange Convention corporateBody
associatedWith Negro Industrial Employment Exchange corporateBody
associatedWith New York and the Savannah Steamship Lines corporateBody
associatedWith Parker, Richard Wayne, 1848-1923. person
associatedWith President Taft's person
associatedWith Revision Committee of the New York Cotton Exchange corporateBody
associatedWith Robert Baden-Powell person
associatedWith Robert Lee Allen person
associatedWith Robert S. Seiler person
associatedWith Rowland Leigh person
associatedWith Rudyard Kipling person
associatedWith Savannah Cotton Exchange corporateBody
associatedWith Seiler, Margaret Gordon. person
associatedWith Seiler, Robert S. person
associatedWith Stiles family
associatedWith Tison & Gordon corporateBody
associatedWith Tison & Mackay corporateBody
associatedWith Town Theatre corporateBody
associatedWith Vance McCormick person
associatedWith Wayne Parker person
associatedWith West Point corporateBody
associatedWith William H. Tison person
associatedWith Willie Low person
associatedWith W. W. Gordon person
associatedWith W. W. Gordon & Company corporateBody
associatedWith W.W. Gordon & Company. corporateBody
associatedWith Yale corporateBody
Place Name Admin Code Country
Confederate States of America
Georgia
Manila (Philippines)
Great Britain
Savannah (Ga.)
England
United States
Philippines
Chicago (Ill.)
Illinois--Chicago
Subject
Americans
Commission merchants
Cotton trade
Deafness in children
Divorce
Families
Fires
Mothers and daughters
Sectionalism (U.S.)
Spanish
World War, 1914-1918
World War, 1914-1918
Women
Occupation
Activity

Family

Active 1810

Active 1968

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