Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Wilson Gaines Richardson

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Wilson Richardson


Wilson Gaines Richardson (born Maysville, Kentucky, December 9, 1825; died Staunton, Tennessee, July 5, 1886) was an American Classicist, minister, and veteran of the Civil War. Richardson was the son of Thomas Gaines and Sarah (née Perry) Richardson and the grandson of Richard and Sarah (née Gaines) Richardson and of Captain John and Elizabeth (née Leathers) Perry of Woodford county, Kentucky.

Contents

Education

He graduated from the University of Alabama with A.B. (1844) and A.M. (1847) degrees after which he served as a tutor in ancient languages at the university. He received his Ph.D. from Hiram College. From 1854 to 1859 Gaines was professor of Latin and French at the University of Mississippi in Oxford and then at Oakland College from 1859-1862.

Military service

With the outbreak of the Civil War, Gaines enlisted as a private in the Lamar Rifles; he was wounded in action at the Battle of Gaines's Mill. Afterwards Gaines Richardson became a paymaster in the Confederate States Navy, serving aboard the CSS Selma (1856) and was subsequently taken prisoner following the Battle of Mobile Bay.

Career after the war

After the war Gaines Richardson was professor of ancient languages and French at Davidson College in Davidson, North Carolina; professor of Latin and French at Central University, Kentucky (1874–78), and professor of languages at Austin College, Texas (1878–81). From 1882-1884 he attended Princeton Theological Seminary and served as a pastor at Staunton, Tennessee (1884–86). Hiram College conferred an honorary Ph.D. in 1876.

Personal life

Wilson Gaines Richardson was twice married: he wed Louisa Vinson, daughter of Dr. Robert Lewis and Martha (née Bush) Kennon of Jackson, Miss., on February 4, 1857, and following her death, Mrs. Anne Herring on February 10, 1876.

References

Wilson Gaines Richardson Wikipedia


Similar Topics