- William R. Terry
William Richard Terry (
March 12 ,1827 –March 28 ,1897 ) was a businessman, politician, prison superintendent and a brigadier general in the Confederate Army during theAmerican Civil War .William R. Terry was born in rural Liberty in
Bedford County, Virginia , to William Terry and Lettie Johnson Terry. He entered theVirginia Military Institute in July 1846 and graduated onJuly 4 ,1850 , ranking 15th in a class of 17 cadets. He then attended theUniversity of Virginia and became a prosperousmerchant and farmer. In 1856, he married Mary Adelaide Pemberton (died 1910). The couple had three sons and three daughters. [VMI archives.]With the outbreak of the Civil War in early 1861 and
Virginia 'ssecession , Terry raised and outfitted a company ofcavalry in Bedford County. His performance at theFirst Battle of Manassas garnered attention, praise, and a promotion in September to colonel of the 24th Virginia Infantry, replacingJubal A. Early , who had been promoted tobrigade command. [Evans, p. 674.] Leading a charge at theBattle of Williamsburg during thePeninsula Campaign , Terry suffered the first of what would eventually be seven combat wounds during the Civil War. He missed theSeven Days Battles , but returned to duty for theNorthern Virginia Campaign in August. Later that year, he assumed temporary command of Kemper's Brigade ofinfantry in theArmy of Northern Virginia before returning to hisregiment al command.Terry was wounded during
Pickett's Charge at theBattle of Gettysburg , and later assumed command of the severely woundedJames Kemper 's brigade. Pickett's rebuilt division was assigned later that year to duty in North Carolina, where it participated in the attacks on New Bern.On
May 31 ,1864 , Terry was promoted to brigadier general and led his depleted troops during theBattle of Cold Harbor and throughout theSiege of Petersburg . He suffered his seventh battle wound onMarch 31 ,1865 , at theBattle of Dinwiddie Court House , but remained with the army until its surrender atAppomattox Court House .Following the war, Terry returned to Bedford County and was elected to the State legislature, serving for a total of eight years. He served briefly as a prison superintendent and was on the Board of Visitors for VMI. He was in charge of the Confederate Soldiers' Home in
Richmond, Virginia , from 1886 until 1893. After suffering a paralyzingstroke , Terry returned to Bedford County to convalesce. [Warner, p. 303.]Terry died in
Chesterfield Court House, Virginia , and is buried inHollywood Cemetery in Richmond.References
*Evans, Clement A., "Confederate Military History". Atlanta: Confederate Publishing Company, 1899.
* Warner, Ezra J., "Generals in Gray: Lives of the Confederate Commanders". Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1959, ISBN 0-8071-0823-5.
* [http://www.vmi.edu/archives.aspx?id=5667 VMI archives]
*FindAGrave|10058 Retrieved on2008-02-13 Notes
External links
* [http://www.generalsandbrevets.com/sgt/terrywr.htm generalsandbrevets.com photo gallery of W. R. Terry]
* [http://aotw.org/officers.php?officer_id=640 Antietam on the Web - brief biography of Terry and his role at Antietam]
* [http://members.aol.com/jweaver300/grayson/terrywr.htm Virginia Civil War Biographies]
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