James Gordon (British Army officer, died 1783)


James Gordon, the third and last Laird of the barony of Ellon, was a British Army officer who fought in the American Revolutionary War. He was highly regarded by all who knew him, friend and foe alike, and became the hero of "The Asgill Affair" of 1782, in which a British prisoner of war was selected by lottery for retaliatory execution, but was eventually released on parole.

Early life

Gordon's father was James Gordon, the second Laird of the barony of Ellon. "The second Laird became his father’s heir on 25 July 1732; and on 22 November 1732, heir male and of provision special to his brother William. On 4 September 1747, he executed a deed empowering his spouse, Elizabeth Glen, conjoined with others, to have full charge of his lands or to dispose of them. It began – I, James Gordon of Ellon, considering that I am to reside for some time out of Scotland, and that it may be necessary for the expeeding of my affairs to sell and dispose of my lands - before my return to Scotland or in case of my decease." Why James should have found it necessary to go out of Scotland is not clear, unless he was a Jacobite, the Battle of Culloden having taken place on 16 April 1746. He seems to have been accompanied by his son, James, aged approximately 12 at the time. James Gordon the second Laird died, according to his will, in April 1749. His inventory was given up by his widow, Elizabeth Glen.
Gordon, the second Laird, married Elizabeth Glen, daughter of Alexander Glen and sister of James Glen, Governor of South Carolina and keeper of the Palace of Linlithgow. She lived in the Palace of Linlithgow, of which her relations, the Linlithgows, had charge. A staunch Jacobite herself, she was particularly well connected. When Charles Edward Stuart arrived in Linlithgow in 1745, he was entertained by her. And in 1762, on being presented to King George III, she told him that she had four beautiful daughters who were each married in one of his four kingdoms. "I have heard of three" said King George, "but never four." "Did your Majesty never hear of the Kingdom of Fife?" was Mrs Glen Gordon’s reply.
James Gordon the third Laird "did not keep Ellon long, for the lands were offered for sale on 8 April 1752. The articles of roup, in the Ellon Charter Chest, show that the upset price was £16,000 sterling, and in addition there is a stipulation that there shall be a present of 200 guineas for a gown to the said Elizabeth Glen. After a protracted competition, the lands were bought for George Gordon, 3rd Earl of Aberdeen in 1752, at £17,600, plus 200 guineas for the gown. There was an annuity of £120 to Elizabeth Glen reserved from the price".
That same year, 1752, Gordon petitioned for a writership in the Honourable East India Company.
"On 25 June 1765, Charles Gordon of Auchleuchrie, son of James Gordon of Meikle Mill of Esslemont, got decreet and sentence before the Lords of Council against James Gordon, "late of Ellon and sometime captain in H.M. Regiment of Foot, eldest son of the late deceased James Gordon of Ellon, and grandson of James Gordon of Ellon", in the matter of a bond of 1,000 marks which James I of Ellon had borrowed from James at Meikle Mill of Esselmont on 17 June 1730. The sum of £20 figures in Charles’s will 1777 as the expenses of the plea and for extracting the decreet. On 23 September 1772, Captain James had sasine in life-rent in Auchanachie ".

Military career

Gordon initially served as an officer in the 115th Regiment of Foot which were raised at Paisley in 1701, and disbanded about 1763, when he was placed on half pay. He was appointed major in the 80th Regiment of Foot on 16 December 1777 and accompanied the regiment on active service during the American Revolutionary War in August 1779. Gordon fought under General Charles Cornwallis, but became an American prisoner of war following capitulation after the siege of Yorktown, Virginia, in October 1781. In 1783, by a curious coincidence, he was a member of the Court Martial in New York in which his Aberdeenshire neighbour, Cosmo Gordon, son of the Earl of Aberdeen, was involved.
In Katherine Mayo's book she describes him thus:
James Gordon, First Major of the Eightieth Foot, was, like his regiment, Scot to the core. Middle-aged, tall, rather heavily built, one glance at the man revealed his character. Frank as the sun and as friendly, brave to a fault, and as generous, utterly self-forgetful in the face of others' needs, neither the activity of his mind nor the dignity and cheerfulness of his spirit would bow to the worst of days. His soldiership, as displayed in the two past years of campaigning, had won him Lord Cornwallis' special praise - coupled once with an aside: 'When I first knew Gordon, twenty years ago, gay in gay London, who could have guessed how much lay in the man?’

In April 1782, a captain of the Monmouth Militia and privateer named Joshua Huddy was overwhelmed and captured by Loyalist forces. Huddy was accused of complicity in the death of a Loyalist farmer. Huddy was conveyed to New York City, then under British control, where he was summarily sentenced to be executed by William Franklin, the Loyalist son of Benjamin Franklin. Huddy was held in leg irons aboard a prison ship until 12 April 1782, when he was taken ashore and hanged. General George Washington responded to pressure for retribution by declaring that a British captain would be executed in retaliation for the killing of Huddy. On 27 May 1782, lots were drawn at the Black Bear Inn, Lancaster, Pennsylvania, with Captain Charles Asgill drawing the paper which put him under threat of execution. Gordon, who was a fellow officer of Asgill, and was in charge of prisoners-of-war, protested in the strongest terms to both General Washington and to Benjamin Lincoln, the Secretary of War that the use of a lottery was illegal by contravening the 14th Article of Capitulation.

Death and legacy

Gordon was the hero of the Asgill Affair: he remained at Asgill's side throughout his ordeal, never once leaving, unless on a mission to save his life. Not only did he offer to go to the gallows in Asgill's stead, saying: “I wish to God they would take me in your place; for I am an old worn out trunk of a tree, and have neither wife nor mother to weep for me. But even to that they will not consent; so all that I can undertake to do is, to accompany the unfortunate individual, whoever he may be, to the place of his martyrdom, and to give him every consolation and support while life remains, and to obey his wishes after it is taken away.” Having nobody to mourn his loss, was, of course, a lie - the most honourable of lies, overlooking that he had a mother, a brother and four sisters. But he also laid a detailed plan to 'spirit Asgill away' to escape execution. But the whole six month affair was the beginning of the end for him and he became increasingly ill during the course of the following year. It had pained him so greatly so see such a popular young man destined to have his life sacrificed:
During his final moments he was greatly cheered and comforted by the knowledge that his conduct in the Asgill case had won for him the approval and commendation of the Prince of Wales.

On his deathbed he was visited by Captain Samuel Graham who had served with him throughout the Revolutionary war. Gordon handed Graham a letter he had received from Lady Asgill in which she expresses her deepest gratitude for all that Gordon had done for her son. In Gordons under arms; a biographical muster roll of officers named Gordon in the navies and armies of Britain, Europe, America and the Jacobite risings it is said that this letter did not reach New York before he died. But in Samuel Graham's Memoirs he recalls that Gordon asked him to thank Lady Asgill for her letter and to apologise to her for being unable to respond. This he did once he himself had returned to Britain.
Gordon died of dropsy on 17 October 1783 at the Morris House in Kingsbridge, Upper Manhattan.
“Last Friday died, Colonel James Gordon of the 80th Regiment, and on Saturday was Interred, with the Military Honours suitable to his rank”. Monday 20 October 1783 New York Gazette and the Weekly Mercury. He was buried in an unmarked grave at Trinity Church Cemetery.

On 20 December 1786, Captain Charles Asgill wrote to the Editor of the New-Haven Gazette and Connecticut Magazine. It was a lengthy eighteen page letter in response to Washington’s Papers being published in that newspaper on 16 November 1786. However, the Editor chose not to publish Asgill’s letter and it has lain hidden from public view ever since. This letter has now been published and the following passage extracted since it refers to James Gordon.
… These were the attentions I received from General Washington ―
I had however a comfort beyond his reach ― totally above his power to invade it was the Pride, the Consolation & Support which I derived from the exalted Friendship & Kind Compassion of Major Gordon of the 80th Regt who feeling for the distresses of a Brother Officer, by the best of Hearts in the cause of humanity & unwilling to leave a Youth of eighteen unadvised & unsupported to act in so peculiar & difficult a situation, sacrificed every Comfort to partake my hardships & Confinement & by the impulse of his excellent & noble Heart, felt on the acquaintance all the steady & perse=vering Zeal that the longest & most tried Friendship could hope for or Claim he was there the whole of this transaction the partaker of my hardships the support of my Spirits, & the monitor of my conduct I am delighted at having the opportunity of proclaiming to the World his generous & benevolent attentions Tho whilst I do justice to his Memory I aggravate the sensations of regret, which I must ever retain, for the loss of him