ROCHESTER, NY (WXXI) – When the enslaved people of Texas learned they were free, two months after President Abraham Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation, it was a Sodus native, Union Army General Gordon Granger, who delivered the news.
On June 10, 1865, the Civil War hero was given command of the Department of Texas on June 10, 1865. Nine days later, as one of his first official acts in that role, Granger published General Order No. 3.
Gordon Granger was born in the hamlet Joy, southwest of Sodus, in November, 1821. His mother later died while giving birth to a daughter and Granger was raised by his paternal grandfather in Phelps.
Before starting his military career at West Point, Granger was a school teacher in North Rose.
Bruce Farrington of the Sodus Historical Society said efforts are underway to erect a marker detailing Granger’s role in history.
“Hard to believe its 2021,” he said, “and no marker has even been erected and that’s one reason so few people know about his story and his significance in history.”
General Granger died at his post of duty in Santa Fe, New Mexico on January 2, 1876.
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