G. M. McIntire: Difference between revisions

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'''George Malcolm McIntire''' (February 22, 1817- August 16, 1884), a mayor of Charlottesville during the Civil War and a druggist. McIntire's wife was Catherine Clark, a member of the prominent Albemarle family that held land under grants received in colonial times and produced George Rogers and William Clark.<ref>http://xroads.virginia.edu/~class/am483_97/projects/hall/McInt1.html</ref>  
'''George Malcolm McIntire''' (February 22, 1817- August 16, 1884), a mayor of Charlottesville during the Civil War and a druggist. McIntire's wife was Catherine Clark, a member of the prominent Albemarle family that held land under grants received in colonial times and produced [[George Rogers]] and [[William Clark]].<ref>http://xroads.virginia.edu/~class/am483_97/projects/hall/McInt1.html</ref>  


Unlike much of Virginia, Charlottesville was spared the brunt of the American Civil War. The only battle to take place in Charlottesville was the Skirmish at Rio Hill, in which George Armstrong Custer was repulsed by local Confederate militia. <ref>https://www.hallowedground.org/Explore-the-Journey/Historic-Towns-Villages/Charlottesville-VA</ref>. On March 3, 1865, a little more than a month before Lee surrendered the Confederacy to Gen. Ulysses S. Grant in a ceremony at Appomattox Court House, about 60 miles south of Charlottesville, Mayor [[G. M. McIntire]] and a group town and University officials surrendered of the town and the University of Virginia to Maj. Gen. George A. Custer’s Union cavalry.(The summer before, Union forces had burned the barracks at Virginia Military Institute, and in retaliation Confederates had set fire to parts of Chambersburg, Pennsylvania. Not only did Custer and his superior, Maj. Gen. Philip H. Sheridan, order that the town and school not be burned, they posted guards to protect the University.)
McIntire and his wife, [[Catherine A. Clarke]] (also spelled Clark) lived with their three boys and four daughters in a house at 815 E. High, home of the famous “[[Tarleton Oak]]”. Their youngest son, [[Paul Goodloe McIntire]], born in 1860, was to become acknowledged as one of the great benefactors of the City of Charlottesville, the County of Albemarle and also the University of Virginia. <ref>{{cite-progress|title= Statue of George Rogers Clark, financed by McIntire, unveiled in 1921
<nowiki>|</nowiki>url=https://www.dailyprogress.com/125yearsofprogress/statue-of-george-rogers-clark-financed-by-mcintire-unveiled-in/article_4f8132f6-c011-11e7-83ab-531bfe5374bf.html</ref>.  


McIntire and his wife, [[Catherine A. Clarke]] (also spelled Chark) lived with their three boys and four daughters in a house at 815 e. High, home of the famous “[[Tarleton Oak]]”. Their youngest son, [[Paul Goodloe McIntire]], was to become acknowledged as one of the great benefactors of the City of Charlottesville, the County of Albemarle and also the University of Virginia. <ref>{{cite-progress|title= Statue of George Rogers Clark, financed by McIntire, unveiled in 1921
[[Paul Goodloe McIntire]]'s gifts to benefit the general pubic included a city block to create a formal landscaped city park (formerly known as [[Lee Park]]) in memory of his parents, purchased on May 28, 1917 and given to the City of Charlottesville, Virginia on May 30, 1917. The block is bound by Jefferson Street, First Street N.E., Market Street and Second Street N.E. to be used as a park by the people of Charlottesville (ref: Plat bk page 33, blk 195. D.B. 32, pg. 7; also D.B. 30, pg. 298)
<nowiki>|</nowiki>url=https://www.dailyprogress.com/125yearsofprogress/statue-of-george-rogers-clark-financed-by-mcintire-unveiled-in/article_4f8132f6-c011-11e7-83ab-531bfe5374bf.html</ref>.  


The gifts of their son to Charlottesville, [[Paul Goodloe McIntire]], included a city block, purchased on May 28, 1917, bound by Jefferson and Market Streets and by First and Second Streets, NE, to created a formal landscaped city Park and Monument in memory or his parents and two separate monuments which commemorate two of his mother's uncles (George Rogers Clark, often hailed as the "Conqueror of the Old Northwest" and William Clark, one of the leaders of the Lewis and Clark Expedition.)
Geo. M. McIntire belonged to the [[Masonic Order]]. He was buried in [[Maplewood Cemetery]] inside the McIntire family plot located at Division C, Block III, Section 1 in the northwest part of the cemetery.<ref>http://www.charlottesville.org/home/showdocument?id=40407</ref> His gravestone matches the same design as that of his wife's, [[Catherine A. Clarke]] McIntire (1820-1903).


George M. McIntire was buried in [[Maplewood Cemetery]] when he died in 1884.  His grave is located next to his wife, [[Catherine A. Clarke]] (1820-1903), within a family plot.
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==External Links==
==External Links==


{{DEFAULTSORT:McIntire, George}} <!-- please replace with person's last and first name for sorting -->
{{DEFAULTSORT:McIntire, George M.}} <!-- please replace with person's last and first name for sorting -->
[[Category: Burials at Maplewood Cemetery]]

Revision as of 00:44, 10 February 2020

George Malcolm McIntire (February 22, 1817- August 16, 1884), a mayor of Charlottesville during the Civil War and a druggist. McIntire's wife was Catherine Clark, a member of the prominent Albemarle family that held land under grants received in colonial times and produced George Rogers and William Clark.[1]

McIntire and his wife, Catherine A. Clarke (also spelled Clark) lived with their three boys and four daughters in a house at 815 E. High, home of the famous “Tarleton Oak”. Their youngest son, Paul Goodloe McIntire, born in 1860, was to become acknowledged as one of the great benefactors of the City of Charlottesville, the County of Albemarle and also the University of Virginia. [2].

Paul Goodloe McIntire's gifts to benefit the general pubic included a city block to create a formal landscaped city park (formerly known as Lee Park) in memory of his parents, purchased on May 28, 1917 and given to the City of Charlottesville, Virginia on May 30, 1917. The block is bound by Jefferson Street, First Street N.E., Market Street and Second Street N.E. to be used as a park by the people of Charlottesville (ref: Plat bk page 33, blk 195. D.B. 32, pg. 7; also D.B. 30, pg. 298)

Geo. M. McIntire belonged to the Masonic Order. He was buried in Maplewood Cemetery inside the McIntire family plot located at Division C, Block III, Section 1 in the northwest part of the cemetery.[3] His gravestone matches the same design as that of his wife's, Catherine A. Clarke McIntire (1820-1903).


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