Honorific Prefix: | Colonel |
Hugh Montgomery, Sr. | |
Birth Name: | Hugh Montgomery |
Birth Date: | 1720 |
Birth Place: | Éire (Ireland) |
Death Date: | December 23, 1779 |
Death Place: | Salisbury, North Carolina |
Placeofburial: | Old English cemetery, Salisbury, North Carolina |
Allegiance: | United States |
Branch: | North Carolina militia |
Serviceyears: | 1776-1777 |
Rank: | colonel |
Commands: | Rowan County Regiment, militia |
Spouse: |
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Hugh Montgomery (1720 – December 23, 1779) was a member of Rowan County Committee of Safety in 1775, and, in spite of his age, briefly commanded of the Rowan County Regiment during the American Revolutionary War.
Hugh Montgomery was born in 1720 in Ireland to James Montgomery, Sr and Ann (nee Thompson) Montgomery. Montgomery secretly carried on a love affair with Catherine Mary Moore, (due to her being a woman of noble birth and he lesser so). There is some evidence that they eloped and were married on board a ship bound for the American colonies in 1749.[1] They lived for a time in the Pennsylvania Colony. He was a "near relative of British General Richard Montgomery, who fell at the Battle of Quebec, in 1775..."[1]
By the 1770s Montgomery resided in Rowan County, North Carolina. He married his second wife, Catherine Sloan, in 1771. In 1775, he was a member of the Rowan County Committee of Safety and the 3rd North Carolina Provincial Congress in 1775.[2] [3] He was commissioned as a colonel on November 23, 1776, in the 1st Rowan County Regiment. In spite of his age, Montgomery replaced Colonel Francis Locke Sr., who had taken command of the newly established 2nd Rowan County Regiment. Colonel Montgomery served as commander until 1777, when Locke once again took command of the unit.[4] [5] [6] [1]
Montgomery died on December 23, 1779, in Salibury, Rowan County, North Carolina,[1] leaving one son and six daughters. He is buried in the Old English Cemetery.[7]