Francis Barretto Spinola | |
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Francis Barretto Spinola |
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Born | March 19, 1821 Stony Brook, Long Island, New York |
Died | April 14, 1891 Washington, D.C. |
(aged 70)
Place of burial | Green-Wood Cemetery, Brooklyn, New York |
Allegiance | United States of America Union |
Service/branch | Union Army |
Rank | Brigadier General |
Commands held | "Excelsior Brigade" (the Second Brigade, Second Division, Third Army Corps) |
Battles/wars |
Francis Barretto Spinola (March 19, 1821 – April 14, 1891) was the first Portuguese American to be elected to the United States House of Representatives, serving as a representative from New York from 1887 to 1891. He also served as a general in the Union Army during the American Civil War.
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Spinola was born in Oil Field, near Stony Brook, Suffolk County, Long Island, New York. He attended Quaker Hill Academy in Dutchess County and then passed the bar exam before establishing a law practice in Brooklyn. He was elected alderman of the Second Ward in Brooklyn in 1846 and 1847, and was reelected in 1849 and served for four years. By 1854, when he joined a special force known as "Special Police" to keep order in the streets of New York, he was already one of the "most respected and influential citizens" of the city.[1] Politically a Democrat, he was a member of the New York State Assembly in 1855. He then served as a member of the New York State Senate from the 3rd District between 1858 and 1861, and was a delegate to the Democratic National Convention in 1860.
He was commissioner of New York Harbor when the Civil War erupted. Spinola joined the volunteer army in a New York regiment and was commissioned as an officer. He was appointed brigadier general of Volunteers on October 2, 1862. He commanded two relief efforts to lift the Confederate siege of Washington, NC. In July/October 1862 he recruited and organized a brigade of four regiments, known as Spinola's Empire Brigade.[2][3]
Spinola assumed command of the New York "Excelsior Brigade" (the Second Brigade, Second Division, Third Army Corps), on July 11, 1863, following the Battle of Gettysburg as the Army of the Potomac strove to fill open command slots created by battle casualties. Spinola's brigade led the Union troops on July 23 at the Battle of Wapping Heights near Warrenton, Virginia, suffering 18 men killed, including two officers. Spinola was wounded in the fighting, along with dozens of his men. He was honorably discharged from the service in August 1865.
Following the war, Spinola was a banker and insurance agent, and became an influential figure among the rapidly growing Italian immigrant community in the New York City area. He was a U.S. Representative from New York's 10th District from 1887 to 1891, and died in office in Washington, D.C.. He was buried at Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn, New York.[4]
Spinola had his country seat at Crane Neck, Long Island. It was menaced by a fire in 1887.[5]
His estate, valued at over $1,000,000 in 1897, was left to his wife (d. 1896), and a nephew, Ferdinand McKee. In 1897 his sister Annie Douglass contested his will.[6]
Francis Barretto Spinola was the son of João Leandro Spinola (b. 1782, Madeira Island), later Anglicised as John Leander Spinola,[7] a Portuguese merchant from Madeira Island, and Elizabeth Phelan (1790, Long Island–1873),[8] daughter of Captain John Phelan (1747, Waterford, Ireland - 14 Sep 1827, Baltimore, Maryland), who served in the American Revolutionary War, and his wife Susanna Davis (b. Long Island, d. 1857). João Leandro Spinola married Eliza Phelan in 18 Jun 1808, at Trinity Church parish, New York.[9]
Frank W. Alduino, in his book Sons of Garibaldi in blue and gray: Italians in the American Civil War (p. 180), refers his father John as a "prosperous farmer and oysterman" who migrated to the United States from Madeira Island, Portugal, whose family had originally hailed from the city of Genoa. The Spinolas, of noble Genoese origin, moved into Madeira Island in the late 15th, early 16th century, as merchants.[10][11] John Leander Spinola is recorded travelling between Funchal and New York on board of the brig Pomona in 1821. He is also recorded travelling to Havana and Rio Grande. He was buried in the Meadow Avenue of Green-Wood Cemetery, Brooklyn, New York.[12]
His grandfather John Phelan was a lieutenant in Wigglesworth's 13th Massachusetts Regiment, and his grand uncles Edward and Patrick were respectively captain and lieutenant at the same time.[7] He was a member of the Order of the Cincinnati.[13] His grand uncle Phillip Phelan joined the American forces during the Revolution War, where he served as lieutenant, and died at the Battle of Eutaw Springs in 22 May 1781. John Phelan's mother was Mary Heron Phelan, from Waterford, Ireland. One of her descendants, Mrs. Regina M. Knott, was one of the earliest members of the Daughters of the American Revolution.[14]
He had an older brother, John Leander Spinola (b. 1818) who worked as a druggist,[15] an younger brother, Douglas A. Spinola (b. 1830), an older sister, Angelina Spinola, seamistress (b. 1814), and two younger sisters, Ann Eliza (b. 1829) and Louisa (b. 1825).
Gen. Spinola provided for his sister Ann Douglass until his death in 1891. She supported herself teaching music until her eyesight failed, and by 1903, with over seventy years of age, she was living on charity, on an allowance of $120 a year by the Society of the Cincinnati. This motivated a newspaper article, pleading for help and referring her family, the Spinolas, as New York aristocrats, a "distinguished family".[7]
Gen. Francis Spinola married Elizabeth Nancy Glazebrook, from Kings, Saratoga, New York, at 7 May 1855, in New York City. Eliza N. Spinola, as she was known, survived her husband for five years, dying in 1896.
United States House of Representatives | ||
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Preceded by [[]] |
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from New York ? – ? |
Succeeded by [[]] |