Enoch Poor (
June 21,
1736,
Old Style –
September 8,
1780) was a
brigadier general in the
Continental Army in the
American Revolutionary War. He was a ship builder and merchant from
Exeter, New Hampshire.
Biography
Poor was born and raised in
Andover, Massachusetts. His father, Thomas Poor had been part of the 1745 expedition that captured
Louisburg, Nova Scotia, during
King George's War. In 1755 young Poor enlisted as a private in one of the Massachusetts units raised to accompany
Jeffrey Amherst's expedition to retake it during the
French and Indian War. His unit enforced the
expulsion of the Acadians. After the war, he came home to Andover, but only briefly. Poor eloped with Martha Osgood, and the newlyweds settled in Exeter.
Poor supported the separatists as early as the
Stamp Act protests in 1765. He served on various committees for the town throughout the period of rising rebellion. In 1775 he was twice elected to the provincial Assembly. When the
Battle of Lexington caused the assembly to call for three regiments of militia, Poor became the colonel of the
2nd New Hampshire Regiment.
While the other regiments under colonels
John Stark and
James Reed were sent to
Boston, the 2nd was stationed at
Portsmouth and Exeter. After the
Battle of Bunker Hill, they were also sent to Boston, arriving on
June 25. In the summer of 1775, the unit was absorbed into the
Continental Army. They were soon ordered into the Northern Department and went with General
Richard Montgomery's
invasion of Canada.
After the disaster in Canada, Poor led the survivors of his regiment in early 1776 back to
Fort Ticonderoga. After refitting and recruiting, the unit was renamed as the 8th Continental regiment and joined Washington's main army in December 1776 at winter quarters near
Morristown, New Jersey.

The monument to Gen. Poor, just a few feet from his burial site in
Hackensack.
The
Congress named Poor a brigadier general on
February 21,
1777. That spring, his brigade of three New Hampshire (
1st,
2nd and
3rd) and two New York regiments (
2nd and
4th)was sent back to Ticonderoga. He withdrew with the rest of
Arthur St. Clair's force of
July 5. Moving south, they joined General
Horatio Gates before the
Battle of Saratoga, and his brigade was expanded by two regiments of
Connecticut militia (
Cook's and
Latimer's).
In the first engagement of Saratoga, the
Battle of Freeman's Farm, Poor's brigade was the first to come to the aid of
Daniel Morgan's attack. Poor held the American left flank, extending into the woods and even wrapping around the British position. They performed well, keeping General
Simon Fraser's regulars engaged while
Benedict Arnold led attacks on the central column.
In the second engagement, the
Battle of Bemis Heights, Poor's brigade was in General
Benjamin Lincoln's division on the left (western) end of the American line. They were closest to the center of the advancing British, so they came under fire from the grenadier battalion of the British center. The fire was ineffective, so Major
John Dyke Acland led the grenadiers in a bayonet charge. Poor held fire until they came very close, then opened up with the massed fire of his 1,400 men. These were the first American shots in the battle. The charge was completely broken, and Acland himself fell wounded. With this collapse of Burgoyne's center, the Americans captured the wounded Acland and Major Williams along with the column's artillery. Poor then turned to his left and gave support to
Ebenezer Learned and Morgan's men.

Poor's burial site. The inscription includes: In 1824, Lafayette re visited this grave, and turning away much affected, exclaimed, Ah, that was one of my Generals.
Poor's brigade again spent the winter with the main army, this time at
Valley Forge. He led the last maneuvers in the
Battle of Monmouth on
June 28,
1778. He accompanied the
Sullivan Expedition in 1779, leading a brigade in the victory at
Newton.
Afterward Poor was assigned to
Lafayette's division and mainly saw garrison duty in
New Jersey. Some sources say Poor was shot in a duel near
Hackensack, New Jersey, on
September 6,
1780, and died two days later from the wound, although the Army surgeon reported that Poor died from
typhus. Poor was buried in the
First Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery in Hackensack.
George Washington and Lafayette both attended his funeral. When Washington wrote to inform Congress of Poor's death, he noted that "He was an officer of distinguished merit, one who as a citizen and soldier had every claim to the esteem and regard of his country."