William Gurdon Saltonstall | |||||
Birth Date: | December 22, 1831 | ||||
Birth Place: | Salem, Massachusetts, U.S. | ||||
Death Place: | Domodossola, Italy | ||||
Branch: | Navy | ||||
Battles: | American Civil War | ||||
Battles Label: | Wars | ||||
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William Gurdon Saltonstall (December 22, 1831 – July 21, 1889) was an American naval officer during the U.S. Civil War and a prominent merchant.
Saltonstall was born on December 22, 1831, in Salem, Massachusetts, into the prominent Saltonstall family. He was a younger son of lawyer Nathaniel Saltonstall (1784–1838) and Caroline (Saunders) Saltonstall (1793–1882). His brother Henry Saltonstall was treasurer of the Pacific Mills of Lawrence, Massachusetts.
His paternal grandparents were Dr. Nathaniel Saltonstall and Anna (White) Saltonstall of Haverhill. His paternal uncle, U.S. Representative Leverett Saltonstall I, married his maternal aunt, Mary Elizabeth Saunders, and his first cousin was Leverett Saltonstall II, the Collector of Customs for the Port of Boston who married Rose Smith Lee, a sister of William's wife. His maternal grandparents were Thomas Saunders and Elizabeth (Elkins) Saunders.[1]
During the U.S. Civil War, Saltonstall commanded in succession two gunboats in the Federal Navy and rendered distinguished service.[2] He "rose from the position of supercargo to master" and was appointed acting lieutenant of the Minnesota. During the blockade off of the Carolinas especially, he won commendation for "gallant conduct" while commander of a gunboat,[3] and in the Little Washington affair made himself known as a brave officer. He left the Navy as Acting Volunteer Lieutenant Commander.[4] He later became a Companion of the Massachusetts Commandery of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States.
After the war, he became a merchant and was treasurer of the York Manufacturing Company, as well as the Everett Mills. He also served as a director of the New England Bank, the Bell Telephone Company, and the Boylston Insurance Company.
In 1867, Saltonstall was married to Josephine Rose Lee (1843–1889), the youngest daughter of Harriet Paine (née Rose) Lee and John Clarke Lee, founder of Lee, Higginson & Co.[5] Together, they were the parents of:[6]
For many years he lived with his mother on Chestnut Street but not long before his death, his winter residence was on Commonwealth Avenue in Boston, and his summer home was at Beverly Farms.[3]
Saltonstall died of heart disease at Domo d'Ossola, Italy, a town near the Swiss border, on July 21, 1889.[12] He had gone abroad in hopes of improving his health, which had declined since the death of his wife in January 1889.[13]
Through his son Robert, he was a grandfather of William Gurdon Saltonstall (1905–1989), the 8th Principal of Phillips Exeter Academy.[14]
Through his son John, he was a grandfather of John L. Saltonstall Jr., Elizabeth Lee Saltonstall, who married August Belmont IV[15] [16] and Richard Lockwood Tower,[17] and Jean Saltonstall (1921–2011), who married Benjamin Crowninshield Bradlee of Watergate infamy, and after their divorce, and Oscar Hausserman Jr.