Mordecai Myers (November 9, 1794 – February 21, 1865) was an American politician and landowner in Savannah, Georgia, in the 19th century.
[1][3] After graduating, Myers was taken by South Carolina governor Lemuel J. Alston onto his staff as an Aide-de-Camp and private secretary with a colonel ranking.
Over the next few years, he was on the board of directors of the State Bank, was secretary of the Association of Friends of Ireland in Savannah, and in 1830 he was making announcements for the city council.
[1] In the 1830 census of Chatham County, Myers was listed as being a general officer, and also as having five males and two females in his household.
[1] In 1839, he was a founding member of the Georgia Historical Society,[1] along with his brother-in-law Solomon Cohen Jr.[6] On 1845, Myers sold land in Savannah's Franklin Ward to Abram Minis.