Edward Gantt (1746–1837) was an Episcopal clergyman who served as Chaplain of the Senate of the United States (1801–1804).
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Edward Gantt was born in Prince George's County, Maryland in 1746, the son of Mary and Thomas Gantt IV. He received his bachelor of arts from Princeton University in 1762[1], and thereafter studied medicine with Benjamin Rush in Philadelphia[2] and in Edinburgh. Gantt received the degree of M.D., thereafter entering in the practice of medicine in Somerset County, Maryland. Sensing a call to ministry, he went to England where he obtained orders in 1770.[3]
Gantt returned home and for a time officiated in his native parish, Christ Church, Calvert County. On January 28, 1776 he began to preach at All Hallow’s Parish in Worcester County. Four years later he became rector of his native parish, and sustained himself by practicing medicine. In 1795 Gantt moved to Georgetown in the District of Columbia. His work in Washington continued to combine ministry and medicine as indicated by an invoice in the White House Historical Association's archives; the doctor’s bill for President Thomas Jefferson’s household dated March 22, 1802, lists the medical services provided to several servants by Dr. Edward Gantt.[4]
From President Jefferson, Dr. Gantt received a supply of smallpox vaccine; soon after January 17, 1802 he vaccinated Miami chief Little Turtle and a group of Miami diplomats who were in Washington,[5] The supply sufficed to vaccinate over three hundred persons connected with the Executive Mansion.
Starting on December 9, 1800 through November 6, 1804, Gantt served as Chaplain of the Senate.
About 1807, under the auspices of Bishop Thomas John Claggett, he went to Kentucky, in the interests of the Episcopal Church.
Edward Gantt and Ann Stoughton Sloss, the daughter of Thomas and Mary Sloss, were married June 26, 1768, by the Rev. Thomas John Claggett, Gantt's cousin, later to be Bishop of Maryland. Their fifteen children include: Thomas Sloss Gantt , William Stoughton Gantt, Edward Sloss Gantt and John Gantt.[6]
Gantt died near Louisville, Kentucky, in 1837.[7][8]
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Preceded by Thomas John Claggett |
4th US Senate Chaplain December 9, 1801 – November 6, 1804 |
Succeeded by A. T. McCormick |
Preceded by A. T. McCormick |
6th US Senate Chaplain December 4, 1805 – December 2, 1806 |
Succeeded by John Johnson Sayrs |