Joseph Ruggles Wilson

Joseph Ruggles Wilson
Born February 28, 1822
Steubenville, Ohio
Died January 21, 1903(1903-01-21) (aged 80)
Princeton, New Jersey
Education Jefferson College
Princeton Theological Seminary
Children Woodrow Wilson
Joseph Ruggles Wilson Jr.
Anne E. Wilson Howe
Marion Wilson
Church Presbyterian

Joseph Ruggles Wilson Sr. (February 28, 1822 – January 21, 1903)[1] was a prominent Presbyterian theologian and father of President Woodrow Wilson, Nashville Banner editor Joseph Ruggles Wilson Jr., and Anne E. Wilson Howe.[2]

Life and work

Wilson was born in Steubenville, Ohio, the son of Mary Anne (Adams) and James Wilson, who were Protestant immigrants from Strabane, County Tyrone, Ireland. He graduated from Jefferson College in Canonsburg, Pennsylvania (now Washington & Jefferson College) in 1844.[3] He taught literature at Washington & Jefferson.[4] Wilson was later employed as a professor at Hampden-Sydney College and left the school just before the birth of his son, Thomas Woodrow Wilson in Staunton, Virginia. There he became the pastor of Staunton’s Presbyterian Church, which he held from 1855-1857. In late 1857 he moved his family to Augusta, Georgia, where he continued to practice as a Presbyterian pastor.[5]

Joseph and Jessie Wilson moved to the South in 1851 and came to fully identify with it, moving from Virginia deeper into the region as Wilson was called to be a minister in Georgia and South Carolina. Joseph Wilson owned slaves, defended slavery, and also set up a Sunday school for his slaves. Both parents identified with the Confederacy during the American Civil War; they cared for wounded soldiers at their church, and Wilson's father briefly served as a chaplain to the Confederate Army.[6] Woodrow Wilson's earliest memory, from the age of three, was of hearing that Abraham Lincoln had been elected and that a war was coming. Wilson would forever recall standing for a moment at General Robert E. Lee's side and looking up into his face.[6]

In 1861 Wilson was one of the founders of the Southern Presbyterian Church in the United States (PCUS) after it split from the northern Presbyterians. He served as the first permanent clerk of the PCUS General Assembly, was Stated Clerk for more than three decades from 1865 to 1898, and was Moderator of the PCUS General Assembly in 1879. He became minister of the First Presbyterian Church in Augusta, Georgia, until 1870.[7]

Wilson cared for wounded Confederate soldiers in battle by transforming his church into a hospital. Wilson became a professor at Columbia Theological Seminary in Columbia, South Carolina, in 1870. He moved to the pastorate at the First Presbyterian Church, Wilmington, NC in 1874. During his time in Wilmington, NC, he presided over many events, including the payment of the local church's debts, the abolition of pew rents, and the inauguration of subscription and weekly contributions.[8] In 1885 he became a professor of theology at Southwestern Presbyterian University in Clarksville, Tennessee.[9]

Children

References

  1. http://www.woodrowwilsonhouse.org/timeline/ImageDisplay.asp?ID=23
  2. Dodd, William Edward (1920). Woodrow Wilson and his Work. Doubleday, Page & Company. p. 3.
  3. "Jefferson College 1802-1865". U. Grant Miller Library Digital Archives. Washington & Jefferson College. Archived from the original on 2009-05-01.
  4. Coleman, Helen Turnbull Waite (1956). Banners in the Wilderness: The Early Years of Washington and Jefferson College. University of Pittsburgh Press. pp. 85–91. OCLC 2191890.
  5. Montgomery, Erick D. "Woodrow Wilson in Georgia". The New Georgia Encyclopedia. Retrieved 7 January 2013.
  6. 1 2 "Woodrow Wilson – 28th President, 1913–1921". PresidentialAvenue.com.
  7. White, William Allen (2007). Woodrow Wilson - The Man, His Times and His Task. Read Books. ISBN 978-1-4067768-50.
  8. "Rev. Joseph Ruggles Wilson". Digital Public Library of America. Retrieved 20 May 2015.
  9. John Milton Cooper, Jr., Woodrow Wilson: A Biography (2009) pp 12-34.
  10. "President Wilson At His Sister .At Close Of Service He Places Flowers...". The Star and Sentinel. September 19, 1916. Retrieved 2010-10-06. The plot in which the remains were interred is also the resting place of her husband and Joseph Ruggles Wilson and wife, father and mother of the family. ...


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