Page:Encyclopedia of Virginia Biography volume 3.djvu/398

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VIRGINIA BIOGRAPHY


legal representation of the Southern Rail road Company, whose counsel he was for many years. Mr. Shackelford was in 1888 chosen a member of the house of delegates, succeeding himself as the Orange county representative, and in 1900 was elected to the state senate. Later he was elected Judge of the judicial circuit, comprising the counties of Culpeper, Orange, Louisa and Goochland. He married. July 1. 1885. Virginia Randolph, and has children. Wheat, Lewis, born in Rockingham county, Virginia, May 20, 1856, son of Rev. James C. Wheat, D. D., Protestant Episcopal minister of Washington, D. C., and Elizabeth R. Lewis, his wife. He received excellent training from his father, a fine classical scholar and experienced teacher, and early became a teacher himself. For a time he was clerk in a bookstore, and he followed other pursuits. At the age of twenty-one he began medical studies under Dr. William P. McGuire, of Winchester, and in 1881 graduated in medicine at the University of Virginia. He engaged in practice in Richmond, and took surgery as a special ty. He was a member of the board of visitors of the Richmond Medical College, and surgeon of the First Virginia Cavalry Regiment. He married Ella W. Rutherford, of Richmond.

Stoddert, William, born in 1824, son of Dr. Thomas Ewell, of Prince William county, Virginia, and Elizabeth Stoddert, his wife, daughter of Hon. Benjamin Stoddert, of Maryland, and Rebecca Loundes, his wife. In early manhood he legally adopted his mother's name, Stoddert, instead of the paternal name. Ewell. He graduated from Hampden-Sidney College, and the Union Theological Seminary of Virginia. He was ordained in the Presbyterian ministry, and became a most successful preacher, popular lecturer and teacher in Tennessee. He received the degree of Doctor of Divinity from William and Mary College in 1876. He was brother of Gen. Richard S. Ewell, of the Confederate army.

Grinnan, Andrew Glassell, born at Fredericksburg, Virginia, August 14, 1827, son of Daniel Grinnan, Jr., and his second wife, Helen Buchan Gassell. He graduated in medicine at the University of Pennsylvania in 1848; practiced his profession at Madison Court House, Virginia, until 1859, then removing to his estate "Brampton." near Rapidan Station. Madison county, Virginia. He married, at "Eagle's Point," Gloucester county, Virginia. June 2, 1859. Georgia Scriven, daughter of John Randolph Bryan and Elizabeth Tucker (Coalter) Bryan, and a niece of John Randolph, of Roanoke. He was very fond of history and literature, and contributed many valuable articles to the newspapers and magazines, being well informed regarding the antiquities of the state. He died May 9. 1902. His son, Daniel Grinnan, is judge of the chancery court of Richmond.

Glassell, William Thornton, born at "Fleetwood," Culpeper county, Virginia, January 15, 1831, son of Andrew Glassell and Susanna Thompson Thornton, his wife. In 1848 he entered the United States navy as a midshipman, was made passed midshipman, in 1858; master, September 15. 1855; and the next day promoted to lieutenant. As midshipman he was on the United States ship St. Lawrence when it was sent to the World's Fair at London, where he made the