Where
Did St. George Get Its Name?
By Bart Anderson - St.
George Naturalist
While
no one knows for sure how St. George was named,
however, two widely used theories are generally
accepted by historians. It seems two influential
men of the day George A. Smith, and early
Mormon Apostle and Phillip St. George Cooke
are likely to be credited.
George
A. Smith, a first cousin to the Prophet Leader
Brigham Young, affectionately earned the name
of The Potato Saint when he urged
the early pioneers to eat raw, unpeeled potatoes,
to cure a troublesome bout with scurvy. Since
potatoes contain a high amount of vitamin C
beneath the skin, the early settlers were cured;
thus, the name St. George.
Although
not a Mormon, Phillip St. George Cooke was a
trusted friend of Brigham Young. Legend has
it that Cooke donated a good share of equipment
and wagons for the southern settlement of Dixie.
Little
history is known of the unique and kind-hearted
man, but he is believed to have been born in
1809 to a British physician. In 1827, Cooke
purportedly graduated from West Point and served
in the infantry and the Dragoons. He was a veteran
of the Black Hawk War and was also commanding
officer of the famous Mormon Battalion of 1847.
At
the outbreak of the Civil War, Cooke remained
loyal to the Union although the majority of
his family, all native Virginians, sided with
the Confederacy, including his son, John R.
Cooke, who earned the rank of a Confederate
Brigadier. At one point during fierce fighting,
Phillip St. George Cooke was ordered to chase
his own son-in-law, Jeb Stuart.
It
wasnt until 1857 that Cooke again came
in contact with the Mormons. But this time Cooke
was under the leadership of Sidney Johnston
and the occasion was the Mormon War.
Cooke
commanded the brigade of the cavalry that formed
the reserve for the Army of Potomac and remained
when it grew to a division before the Peninsula
Campaign. He also fought at York Town, Williamsburg
and in the Seven Days War.
Following
the conclusion of the campaign, he was assigned
to court martial duty. He held a district command
in Louisiana and finished the war superintending
the Unions recruiting efforts. He remained
in the army until his 1873 retirement, having
served on administrative bodies and in department
commands. Phillip St. George Cooke died in 1895.