Robert Field Stockton (20
August 1795 7 October 1866) was a United States
naval commodore, notable in the capture of
California
during the Mexican-American War. Stockton
was from a notable political family and also served as a
U.S. Senator from
New
Jersey
.
Biography
He was
born at Morven
, Stockton Street, Princeton, New Jersey
into a political family; his father Richard Stockton was a
U.S. Senator and Representative, and his grandfather,
Judge Richard Stockton
was Attorney General for New Jersey and a signer of the
Declaration of
Independence.
Early naval service
Stockton was appointed a
midshipman in
the
U.S. Navy at the age of 16, serving at sea and
ashore during the
War of 1812.
After that
conflict, Lieutenant Stockton was assigned to ships operating in
the Mediterranean
, in the Caribbean
and off the coast of West
Africa. He was the first
naval
officer to act against the
slave
trade and captured several slave ships.
Stockton along with
Dr. Eli Ayers of the American Colonization Society
negotiated a treaty that led to the founding of the state of
Liberia
.
Business affairs
During the
later 1820s and into the 1830s, he primarily devoted his attention
to business affairs in New
Jersey
. The birth of his son
John P. Stockton, later also a U.S. Senator
representing New Jersey, occurred during this time.

Commodore Robert F.
Resumes active naval service
In 1838, Stockton resumed active naval service as a
captain. He served in the European area, but
took leave in 1840 to undertake political work. Offered the post of
U.S. Secretary of the Navy by
President
John Tyler in 1841, he declined
the offer, but worked successfully to gain support for the
construction of an advanced steam warship with a battery of very
heavy guns.
This ship became
USS
Princeton, the Navy's first screw-propelled
steamer. The ship was designed by
John Ericsson. Stockton commanded her when she
was completed in 1843. The ship was armed with two long 225 pound
wrought iron guns, called the "
Peacemaker" and the
"
Oregon". Although he was the deviser of the defective
gun, Captain Stockton was absolved of all responsibility for the
February 1844 explosion of the gun, the
Peacemaker, on
board the ship. The explosion killed two
cabinet secretaries and several
others.
Cleared by the court of any wrongdoing in the explosion incident,
Stockton was sent by President
James
K. Polk to Texas
.
Stockton
carried with him Polk's offer to annex Texas, sailing on the
Princeton and arriving in Galveston
. .
Stockton's observations while in Texas made
him aware of the looming war with
Mexico, a fact he communicated directly to Polk once he arrived
back in Washington
. No vessel, during the Mexican war was more
useful than the Princeton in the Gulf of Mexico. The records of the
Navy Department showed she performed more service than all the rest
of the Gulf squadron put together.
Mexican-American War
Conquest of California
On 23
July 1846 Commodore Stockton
arrived in Monterey,
California
and took over command from the ailing Commodore
John D. Sloat of the Pacific Squadron of U.S. naval forces in
the Pacific
Ocean
. Commodore Sloat had previously raised the
US Flag, without resistance, at Monterey, but had no plan to
conduct any further military operations on shore and once relieved,
sailed home to the United States, leaving Commodore Stockton in
command of all US forces. Stockton's command ship was the
USS Congress and his
combined fleet of three
frigates with about
480 men each, one
Ship of the line
with about 780 men and up to four
sloops with
about 200 men each as well as three storeships made him the
strongest force in California as well as the senior military
commander.
He was the main driving force in continuing
to take possession of California
.
On 11 August 1846 Commodore Stockton marched on Cuidad de Los
Angeles to meet in battle with
General
Castro's army. Upon learning of the imminent arrival of
Commodore Stockton, Castro took flight in panic, leaving behind all
his artillery and made off in the direction of Sonora. Immediately
after these events Stockton dispatched a courier (the celebrated
Kit Carson) to inform Washington of the
proceedings and details of his conquest of California.
On Dec 6th 1846 Stockton learned that
General Stephen Kearny had arrived in
California with a small force and that he was besieged by vastly
superior enemy forces at
San
Pasqual. Kearny was among the wounded and in command of only 60
weary dragoons mounted on tired mules who were in a perilous
position and under attack from a Californio-Mexican cavalry force
under
Andres Pico. But for Commodore
Stockton's immediate decision to take personal command of a relief
column, the outcome could have been disastrous for Kearny.
Later, the combined forces consolidated control over San Diego, and
in January 1847 won the minor skirmishes at the
Battle of Rio San Gabriel and
Battle of La Mesa taking back
control of Los Angeles. Faced with the approximate 400 men under
John C. Fremont's
California Battalion as well as
Stockton and Kearny's troops, the Californios sued for peace and
signed the
Treaty of Cahuenga,
which ending fighting in Alta California. Stockton, as senior
military authority and first Governor of California, authorized
John C. Fremont's appointment to succeed him as military governor
and commander of the
California
Battalion militia force. When General Kearny finally arrived
with orders to assume control of the temporary government Stockton
turned over control to Kearny.
Political pursuits
Stockton resigned from the Navy in May 1850 and returned to
business and political pursuits. In 1851 he was elected as a
Democrat from New
Jersey to the
United States
Senate, where he sponsored a bill to abolish
flogging as a Navy punishment. He resigned on
January 10, 1853 to serve as president of the
Delaware and Raritan Canal
Company, a position he held until 1866.
He was a delegate to the unsuccessful
Peace Conference of 1861 that
attempted to settle the secession crisis; instead the
American Civil War began later that year.
In 1863,
he was appointed to command the New Jersey
militia when
the Confederate Army invaded
Pennsylvania
. Commodore Robert F.
Stockton died at
Princeton, New
Jersey
in October 1866, and is buried in the Princeton
Cemetery
.
Legacy
Four U.S. Navy ships have been named
USS
Stockton in his honor.
The cities of Stockton,
California
, Stockton, Missouri
and Fort Stockton, Texas
are named in his honor, as is the borough of
Stockton,
New Jersey
, Stockton Street in
San
Francisco, California
and Fort Stockton, San Diego, California
, which is now a ruin, but was occupied during the
Mexican-American War.
There is also a
rest area on the
New Jersey Turnpike named in his
honor.
References and notes
Retrieved on 2009-05-03
- The United States Navy: A 200-year History. pp
196–221. Houghton Mifflin Company.C 1986
- Bancroft, Hubert Howe, 1882, The Works of Hubert Howe
Bancroft, San Francisco: A.L. Bancroft & Co., ISBN
2539133.