John V Gott, JR

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John V Gott, JR

Also Known As: "John Gott Jr"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Hebron, Tolland, Connecticut
Death: December 14, 1796 (66)
Macedonia, Litchfield, Connecticut, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of John Jr. Gott, jr and Eleanor Dodge Gott - Howard
Husband of Ann Trotter
Father of Lucretia Gott; Adolphus Gott; John W. Gott; Dea. Storey (Deacon) Gott; David Sr Gott and 4 others
Brother of Rebecca Skinner; Isaac Gott; Story Gott; Daniel Gott; Esther Strong and 1 other
Half brother of Martha Tyler; Jemima Waters; Eleanor Howard; Jonathan Howard; Daniel Howard and 8 others

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About John V Gott, JR

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/155875203/john-gott

GEDCOM Source

@R-1674925221@ Ancestry Family Trees Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members. Ancestry Family Tree http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=24882005&pid...


GEDCOM Note

https://ggwcassar.wordpress.com/our-ancestors/pvt-john-gott-jr/

“The Spirit of 1776” As written by: J. Edson Myers New York was a hot spot during the Revolutionary War. The British sought to maintain control of the Hudson River and thereby divide the American Revolutionists of New England from New York, Pennsylvania, and the Southern Colonies. It was especially hot and contested in this region because the Hudson River Valley was filled with many rich landowners whose interests seemed to bind them to the English system of government. Just east of this region was Massachusetts, a center of agitation supporting the struggle for a free and independent America. Nearby were West Point, Stoney Point, White Plains, and Ticonderoga. This geography was near where British General “Gentleman Johnny” Burgoyne was to surrender after having been defeated by the American Revolutionaries at the battle of Saratoga. It was because my great-grandfathers, John Gott Sr., his son John Gott Jr., and his son Story Gott were then living in Hebron, Connecticut; Austerlitz, New York; and Spencertown, New York that they were placed in the geographical center of the Hudson River revolutionary War battlefieds. We Americans can be very proud of this early-American Gott family, for when the call came and men were needed for the cause, John Gott Sr. moulded his bullets, filled his powder horn, and shouldered his musket. He called for his son, John Gott, and his grandson, Story Gott, to do the same and they marched off to war for their country and its fight for freedom. Little Story Gott was then only a lad of twelve, and was, therefore, taken along as a drummer boy to help keep up the spirits of their fellow soldiers. No finer example of the “Spirit of 1776” can be demonstrated than by John Gott and his sons. All three drew land bounty rights at the end of the Revolutionary War for their services, and all remained in Spencertown, New York, after the Revolution. All three lived to be Deacons of the church in Spencertown. Consequently, a very fine tombstone monument was erected by the citizenry in the graveyard at Spencertown in memory of John Gott. We find on this monument the following inscription: DEACON STORY GOTT b. 1767 d. 1841 A soldier of the Revolution. A patriotic citizen of the Republic which he fought to establish; warm and generous friend; a shining light in the church of the Redeemer, he lived respected by all the good and died amidst their regrets. The now-famous painting depicting these two patriot great-grandfathers and one great-uncle, first called “Yankee Doodle” and now referred to as “Spirit of 1776,” today hangs at the museum in Abbott Hall, Marblehead, Massachusetts. Artist Archibald M. Williard (1837-1918) painted it. Archibald was the brother of Judson Willard, who married Delia Gott. The artist created the painting precisely because of Delia Gott’s family’s Revolutionary War history. Since it was some generations after the conclusion of the American Revolution, the artist used models to depict the Gott men. The fifer in the painting, depicting John Gott Jr., was modeled by Hugh Mosier, a Lorain County, Ohio farmer. The drummer boy depicting Story Gott was modeled by Harry K. Deveraux from the Brooks School in Cleveland, Ohio. The Rev. Samuel L. Willard (the 85-year-old father of the artist) posed as the principal character, John Gott Sr. The Rev. Willard and his artist-son, Archibald, resided in the town of Wellington, Ohio. Wellington, Spencer, Penfield, and LaGrange, Ohio were the then-hometown areas of the Gott family, beginning in the year 1828. Shown below, is the 1976 United States Centennial Stamp “The Spirit of 1776,” which was also taken from this now famous pairing. Originally entitled Yankee Doodle, this is one of several versions of a scene painted by Archibald MacNeal Willard in the late nineteenth century that came to be known as The Spirit of '76. Often imitated or parodied, it is one of the most famous images relating to the American Revolutionary War. The life-sized original hangs in Abbot Hall in Marblehead, Massachusetts. The flag in the painting, often assumed to be the Betsy Ross flag, is actually the Cowpens flag, flown during a major turning point in the war, the Battle of Cowpens. Source/Photographer Archibald Willard Other versions Spirit of '76.jpg



Chidlren:

Lucretia Gott 1757–1860 John Gott 1762–1838 Storey Gott 1765–1841 Adolphus Gott 1766–1838 David Gott* 1777–1861 Lucretia Gott 1778–1860 Anna Gott 1780–1838 Polly Gott 1790–

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John V Gott, JR's Timeline

1730
April 13, 1730
Hebron, Tolland, Connecticut
1757
May 17, 1757
Hebron, Tolland, Connecticut
1760
February 8, 1760
Hebron, Tolland, Connecticut
1762
March 3, 1762
Hebron, Tolland, Connecticut, USA
1765
November 30, 1765
Colchester, New London County, CT, British Colonial America
1771
April 16, 1771
New York, British Colonial America
1777
April 11, 1777
Austerlitz, Columbia, New York
1780
1780
Austerlitz, Columbia, New York, USA
1790
1790
East Worcester, Otsego, New York, USA