Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Walter Ross Wade

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Occupation
  
Physician, planter

Children
  
4

Name
  
Walter Wade


Born
  
1810
South Carolina

Spouse(s)
  
Martha Taylor Wade Mabella Jane Duncan Chamberlain

Parent(s)
  
Daniel Wade Jean Brown Ross

Relatives
  
Isaac Ross (grandfather)

Died
  
1862, Jefferson County, Mississippi, United States

Walter Ross Wade (1810–1862) was an American physician and planter in the Antebellum South. He owned the Rosswood Plantation, a cotton plantation in Jefferson County, Mississippi. His diary was published posthumously.

Contents

Early life

Walter Ross Wade was born in 1810 in South Carolina. His father was Daniel Wade and his mother, Jean Brown Ross. His maternal grandfather was Isaac Ross, the first owner of the Prospect Hill Plantation.

Career

He worked as a physician, treating patients in the Natchez District. He kept a diary of his patient visits and other activities.

He purchased the Rosswood Plantation, a 1,250-acre cotton plantation in Jefferson County, Mississippi. He owned more than 100 African slaves who picked cotton in the fields. In 1857, he hired architect David Schroeder to design the Greek Revival mansion. It was built as a gift for his second wife. The Wades entertained guests regularly and went fox-hunting on the grounds. During the American Civil War of 1861-1865, they invited the Confederate States Army to use the mansion as a Confederate hospital.

Personal life

He married a cousin, Martha Taylor Wade. They had two children. After she died, he got remarried to Mabella Jane Duncan Chamberlain, and they also had two children.

Death

He died in 1862.

Legacy

His diary was published posthumously. In 2003, it was recorded as an audio book on a CD.

References

Walter Ross Wade Wikipedia