Gershom Mott (April 7, 1822 – November 29, 1884) was a United States Army officer and a General in the Union Army, a commander in the Eastern Theater of...
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Gershom Mott Williams (February 11, 1857 – April 14, 1923) was an American bishop. He was the first Episcopalian bishop of Marquette. He was a church journalist...
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Confederate flank towards Burgess Mill. The division under Brig. Gen. Gershom Mott crossed the Boydton Plank Road and attacked Maj. Gen. Wade Hampton's...
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1897, designated the new fort as Fort Mott, in honor of Major General Gershom Mott, of Trenton. Gershom Mott had served with distinction as a Second...
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State Assembly from 1743 to 1754. John Mott had two brothers, Gershom and Asher, and a sister, Sarah. John Mott moved to the Trenton area and purchased...
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General Mott may refer to: Gershom Mott (1822–1884), U.S. Army major general Harry J. Mott III (1929–2023), U.S. Army brigadier general Stanley Mott (1873–1959)...
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politician Frank Luther Mott (1886–1964), American historian Frederick Walker Mott (1853–1926), British biochemist Gershom Mott (1822–1884), American army...
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Israeli journalist, and blogger Gershom Whitfield Guinness (1869–1927), Protestant missionary, doctor, and writer Gershom Mott (1822–1884), United States Army...
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convened with Maj. Gen. Lew Wallace presiding. The other members were Gershom Mott; John W. Geary; Lorenzo Thomas; Francis Fessenden; Edward S. Bragg; John...
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were numbered as the 3rd and 4th, with Generals David B. Birney and Gershom Mott in command. By this accession, the II Corps attained in April 1864, an...
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