Augustus Peabody Gardner, congressman. Member Massachusetts Senate, 1899-1901; Served as captain and assistant adjutant general on staff General James H. Wilson during Spanish-American War.
Background
Gardner was born on November 5, 1865 in Boston, Massachusetts to Joseph Peabody Gardner and Harriet Sears Amory. He was the descendant of Thomas Gardner (planter) and nephew of John Lowell "Jack" Gardner II whose wife was Isabella Stewart Gardner. On June 14, 1892, Gardner married Constance Lodge, daughter of Henry Cabot Lodge, at Saint Anne"s Church, Nahant, Massachusetts.
Education
He graduated from Harvard University in 1886. He studied law at Harvard Law School, but never practised, instead devoting himself to the management of his estate.
Career
Gardner was the son-in-law of Henry Cabot Lodge. Their mother had died in 1865. After his death, Constance married Major General Charles Clarence Williams who served as United States. Army Chief of Ordnance from July 1918 until April 1930.
Spanish–American War
Gardner served in the Spanish–American War as a captain and assistant adjutant general on the staff of Major General James Wilson and fought at the Battle of Coamo.
He served from May 12 to December 31, 1898. Political office
Gardner was elected, as a Republican, to the Fifty-seventh Congress by special election, after the resignation of United States Representative William H. Moody.
Gardner was reelected to the eight succeeding Congresses (November 4, 1902 – May 15, 1917). Gardner was the chairman of the Committee on Industrial Arts and Expositions during the Fifty-ninth and Sixtieth Congresses.
Rescue of the Lodges from France
In August 1914 Gardner traveled to France to extract them, and to bring them to safety in London.
World War I
Shortly after the United States declared war on Germany in April 1917, Gardner resigned from Congress to entered the Army on May 24, 1917 as a colonel in the Adjutant General"s Department. He was first assigned to the headquarters of the Eastern Department at Governors Island in New York Harbor and later as adjutant of the 31st Division. Desiring combat duty, he requested and accepted a demotion to the rank of major on December 8, 1917.
He was then placed in command of the 1st Battalion, 121st Infantry, 31st Division at Camp Wheeler in Georgia.
Gardner died of pneumonia while on active duty at Macon, Georgia on January 14, 1918. He was buried in Arlington National Cemetery.
Achievements
Membership
Member Massachusetts Senate, 1899-1901. Served as captain and assistant adjutant general on staff General James H. Wilson during Spanish-American War.