Colonel George Bomford

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Colonel George Bomford

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Queens County, New York, United States
Death: March 25, 1848 (67-68)
Boston, Suffolk County, Massachusetts, United States
Place of Burial: 201 Allison Street Northwest, Washington, District of Columbia, DC, 20011, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of Thomas Bomford
Husband of Clara Bomford and Louisa Sophia Bomford
Father of Louisa Sophia Derby; Ruth Theodora Paine; Henry Baldwin Bomford; Dr. George Erving Bomford and Brevet Brig. General James Vote Bomford (USA)

Managed by: Private User
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About Colonel George Bomford

Colonel George Bomford

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Bomford
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/20350434/george-bomford

Bomford was a distinguished military officer in the United States Army and an inventor and designer of weapons and defensive installations.

Early Life and Education

Bomford was born on Long Island, New York in 1780 during the American Revolutionary War, the son of a British officer, Thomas Bomford of the 60th Royal Artillery. His birth records do not indicate an exact date of birth nor the name of his father. Bomford later told his son James the information, who reported it in records at Norwich University.

By a chance meeting, Bomford befriended the first graduate of West Point Joseph Gardner Swift. Swift sought and received a "Cadet's Warrant" from General Henry Dearborn for his friend, and Bomford was appointed to West Point from the state of New York on 23 October 1804, despite the circumstances of his birth.

Career

After graduating from West Point in 1805, as a lieutenant in the Corps of Engineers, he served as assistant engineer on the defenses of New York Harbor under West Point superintendent and Chief of Engineers, Jonathan Williams (engineer) until 1808. From 1808 to 1810, Bomford served on the defenses of Chesapeake Bay. From 1810 to 1812 he served as the superintendent engineer of works on Governors Island in the construction of Castle Williams.

At the start of the war of 1812-1815, Bomford was a staff major in the ordnance department and was appointed to the post of assistant commissary general of ordnance on 18 June 1812. On 6 July 1812 he was attached to the Corps of Engineers.

After the war, on 9 February 1815 Bomford was promoted to lieutenant colonel. As an engineer, he and Joseph Gardner Swift were called upon to help rebuild the U.S. Capitol in Washington D.C., an effort that lasted from 1815 until 1819.

Bomford was attached to the artillery when the army was reorganized in 1821 and the Ordnance Department and Artillery Departments were merged in the interest of economy. In 1832, the Ordnance Department was re-established as the Ordnance Corps (United States Army). At that time he was promoted to full colonel and appointed as the third chief of ordnance, the first of the new department, on 30 May 1832.

When General Tadeusz Kościuszko died in 1817, despite writing four wills, two executors (including Thomas Jefferson) failed to act. By time the U.S. Supreme Court declared in 1852 that the general died intestate and gave his money to his heirs, the value of his estate had decreased substantially; this was attributed by a case attorney to Colonel George Bomford's use of the estate for his own purposes.

In 1842 he became inspector of arsenals, ordnance, arms, and munitions of war. He held both positions until his death in 1848.

In 1844, Bomford developed the heavy coastal defense howitzers that would come to be referred to as Columbiads.

Columbiad Gun

The heavy coastal defense howitzers designed by Bomford combined attributes of the gun, and the mortar, to produce a long-range, high-powered, anti-ship weapon. The first prototype guns of this type, pattern 1842 and earlier produced by the Alger Foundry, came to be referred to as Columbiads in honor of Joel Barlow, poet and diplomat married to Bomford's wife's sister. Bomford and his wife Clara lived on the estate of Joel Barlow.

The army stationed these guns in 1844 around the country as a part of the Second System of Defense. Bomford's design was improved by the Dahlgren Gun, but the guns were superseded by the Rodman gun (Thomas Jackson Rodman).

It was considered an improved Columbiad, especially the later models with barrels. The Rodman Gun was considered more reliable than the larger sized Parrott rifles (which were eventually pulled from inventory) or the early Columbiads. Columbiads continued in operation until after the Spanish-American War when they were rendered obsolete by the breech-loading rifled cannon.

Marriage and Family

Shortly after graduating West Point, Bomford married Louisa Sophia Catton, daughter of the noted English artist Charles P. Catton. They had three children: George Catton Bomford, James Vote (or Votey) Bomford, and Louisa Sophia Bomford.

George Catton was born 17 December 1807. While a cadet at West Point, he was found guilty on four charges in a court martial on 2 March 1827, resulting from the Eggnog Riot of December 25, 1826. Although expelled from the Academy, he was allowed to retire from the Army.

James was born 5 October 1811 on Governors Island in New York Harbor. He graduated from Norwich University in (Vermont) England in 1828. He gained an appointment at West Point, where he graduated in 1832. He rose to a colonel in the 8th United States infantry, and was promoted to a brevet brigadier general in the American Civil War. During this time, he was held as a prisoner by the Confederates from April 1861 to May 1862. After a career in the Army, he died Jan. 6, 1892, at Elizabeth, New Jersey at the age of 80 and was buried at Evergreen Cemetery, Hillside, New Jersey.

James' son, George N. Bomford, also had a military career. He was a Lieutenant Colonel of the 42nd New York Infantry, 3rd Brigade of the Second Division, under the command of Brigadier General Oliver O. Howard, and fought at the Battle of Fredericksburg during the Civil War. He died 5 September 1897.

Louisa Sophia Bomford was born on 3 May 1813 in Albany, New York. She died 19 April 1864 in Newport, Rhode Island.

George Bomford married a second time 20 April 1816 to Clarissa "Clara" Baldwin (died 10 December 1856) and they had three children. They were Ruth Theodora: born 1 January 1818, married John (Jott) Stone Paine, and died 28 November 1895; Henry Baldwin: born 1823 or 1824, died 9 September 1845; and George Erving Bomford, born 31 March 1829, became a surgeon and married, and died 1864 during the Civil War.

Death

George Bomford died in Boston, Massachusetts 25 March 1848 while on army business and was buried in a tomb in the family mausoleum on the "Kalorama estate" in Washington, D.C. In 1892, due to construction of Sherman Circle on the site of the estate, the remains of George Bomford, his wife Clara, and son Henry Baldwin Bomford, were moved to Rock Creek Cemetery and placed under one headstone.



Chief of Ordnance, U.S. Army

Inventor: The "Columbiad" type of cannon, in 1811.

In 1892, he was buried here, when the city razed his original tomb in the family mausoleum on "Kalorama" estate. He is now buried with his 2nd wife & a son beneath a single grave marker.

Biographical Register of the Officers and Graduates of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, N. Y. by Bvt. Maj. - Gen George W. Cullum, published 1891

(Born N.Y.)...GEORGE BOMFORD...(Ap'd N.Y.) Military History. - Cadet of the Military Academy, Oct. 24, 1804 to July 1, 1805, when he was graduated and promoted in the Army to Second Lieut., Corps of Engineers, July 1, 1805. (First Lieut., Corps of Engineers, Oct. 30, 1806) (Captain, Corps of Engineers, Feb. 23, 1808) (Major, Staff - Asst. Com. - Gen. of Ordnance, June 18, 1812) (Major, Corps of Engineers, July 6, 1812) (Bvt. Lieut. - Colonel, Dec. 22, 1814, for Meritorious Services in the Ordnance Department) (Lieut. - Colonel, Ordnance, Feb. 9, 1815) (Bvt. Colonel, February 9, 1825, for Faithful Service Ten Years in one Grade)

Served: as Assistant Engineer at the fortifications of the inner harbor of New York, 1805-8, and on the defenses of Chesapeake Bay and its tributary waters, 1808-10; as Superintending Engineer of the works on Governor's Island, New York harbor, 1810-12; in the War of 1812-15 with Great Britain, on Ordnance duty, and introduced Bomb Cannon under the name of "Columbiads;" as Member of Ordnance Boards, and on various other ordnance duties, from the termination of the War in 1815, till the re-organization of the Army, when he was retained as Lieut. Colonel, 1st Artillery, June 1, 1821, continuing, however, on Ordnance duty until the organization of the Ordnance Corps, when he was promoted Colonel and Chief of Ordnance of the U. S. Army, May 30, 1832, and placed in command of the Ordnance Corps and Ordnance Bureau, at Washington D. C., which he held until Feb. 1, 1842, when he became Inspector of Arsenals, Ordnance, Arms and Munitions of War, continuing on this duty until Mar. 25, 1848, during which period he made ingenious and valuable experiments on the best form for pieces of heavy ordnance, which have since led to the adoption of the improved patterns of such cannon now used in the United States service. Member of the Board of Visitors to the Military Academy, 1845. Died, Mar. 25, 1848, at Boston, Mas.: Aged 68

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Colonel George Bomford's Timeline

1780
1780
Queens County, New York, United States
1811
October 5, 1811
Governors Island, New York, United States
1813
May 3, 1813
Albany, Albany County, New York, United States
1818
January 1, 1818
Washington, District of Columbia, United States
1824
1824
1827
March 31, 1827
Washington, District of Columbia, DC, United States
1848
March 25, 1848
Age 68
Boston, Suffolk County, Massachusetts, United States
????
Rock Creek Cemetery, 201 Allison Street Northwest, Washington, District of Columbia, DC, 20011, United States