Our American Family - Person Sheet
Our American Family - Person Sheet
NameGeorge GORDON 695
Birth Date2 May 1752
Birth PlaceBerkeley, Newberry County, South Carolina
Death Date12 Jan 1835 Age: 82
Death PlaceSaint Helena Parish, Louisiana
Burial PlaceGreensburg, St. Helena Parish, Louisiana, Gordon Farm Cemetery
OccupationRevolutionary War Soldier, Col. Brandon’s Regiment, South Carolina
FatherJohn Joseph GORDON Sr. , 330 (1710-1756)
MotherRuth Emerson ANDREWS , 331 (1716-1779)
Spouses
Birth Date26 Dec 1764
Birth PlaceSouth Carolina
Death Date1835 Age: 70
Death PlaceSt. Helena Parish, Louisiana
Burial PlaceGreensburg, St. Helena Parish, Louisiana, Gordon Farm Cemetery
Family ID8781
Notes for George GORDON
John & Ruth Gordon move to SC from VA in 1749, receiving a Royal Land Grant from King
George Il of 460 ac. on the Collins/Enoree River at Avery's Ford in Newberry & Union Counties.

They brought a family of six sons and one daughter:
1)Thomas, 2)John, 3) Benjamin, 4) Ruth, 5) William, 6) Govin, 7) George. All six sons were in the
Rev. War. Thomas a Major. Three were in the Cherokee War under Col. John Chevillette.

Builders of the Gordon Fort on the Union Co. side of the Enoree River at the current day
county line @old Avery's Ford. this was adjacent to the Gordon Cemetery location.

http://www.northamericanforts.com/East/sc-north.html#new

Also builders of the bridge over the Tyger River that is still named Gordon's Bridge, CR
36/Tuckertown Rd.

Almost all of the descendants of John & Ruth Gordon connected via Find-a-Grave were taken
from "Gordon's of the Deep South" book by Ermimie Northcutt Marshall and her many
contacts. Robert

From Find A Grave on Ancestry by scuppy1.

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Served in Rev. War-Col. Brandon's Regiment, South Carolina Militia from Newberry District. DAR# 295878

George's brother, Thomas, was a Major in Brandon's Regiment and his brothers William & Govin were Captains.

In 1763, the Treaty of Paris confirmed the cession to Spain but modified the territory involved because England demanded East Florida, West Florida and Canada. This treaty gave Britain the east side of the Mississippi including Baton Rouge. In 1779, Spain regained West Florida from England.

With the Treaty of San Ildefonso in 1800, Louisiana once again became a French territory after Napoleon's negotiations with Spain. It was a secretly negotiated treaty in which Spain returned the colonial territory of Louisiana to France. Boundaries of the territory being returned were not specified in the treaty. This later became a point of contention between Spain and the United States with Spain insisting the province of West Florida was not part of the territory included in the Louisiana Purchase in 1803.

Spain continued to hold onto this area until the West Florida Rebellion of 1810 when a small group of colonists, increasingly dissatisfied with Spanish rule, declared their independence from Spain, seized Baton Rouge from the Spanish officials and declared themselves the free and independent Republic of West Florida. They became a nation for 74 days, complete with president, governing body, constitution and flag. It was the original Lone Star Republic. The original copy of the constitution is now in the Louisiana State Archives through a donation in 2002 by Leila Lee Roberts, the great-granddaughter of Fulwar Skipwith, only governor of the republic.
The Historic Land Office building is significant because it housed the St. Helena District Land Office which served the entire Florida Parishes. Although Congress organized a land district out of the Florida Parishes in 1812, no provision had been made for the surveying of the private claims and public lands in this area.

On March 1819, however, Congress officially named this region the St. Helena District and provided for its survey. It was here that Florida Parish "residents applied for American patents to their lands". In fact, this can be seen as one of the many steps involved in the Americanization of Louisiana. In 1843 the land office was moved from Greensburg to Baton Rouge.**

George and Eliz are buried in their family cemetery on the Gordon land on the Old Liberty Road. Their Spanish Land Grant(between 1800 & 1810) bordered the State line on the north and the Tickfaw River on the west. Today that property is the Circle H Ranch, Hwy 441, Kenwood, LA. Since the owners will not allow, cenotaph markers for George & wife will be placed in their grandson's, William Stark Gordon, cemetery, Amite Co., MS.

**St. Helena Parish - LSU AgCenter, www.lsuagcenter.com › portals › features › about_parish

On Find A Grave.

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Last Modified 2 Apr 2025Created 8 Apr 2025 using Reunion on a Macintosh


Created 8 Apr 2025.
© Copyright 1989-2025 by John Johnson. Any commercial use is prohibited.

Created on a Macintosh computer using Reunion genealogy software.

“I am bound to them though I cannot look into their eyes or hear their voices. I honor their history. I cherish their lives.
I will tell their story. I will remember them for I am the result of the very love, struggle, sacrifice and journey of thousands.”
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