dent Lincoln appointed Mr. White U. S. judge for the district of Indiana, but he lived to discharge the duties of the office only a few months.
WHITE, Alexander, legislator, b. in Rappa-
hannock county, Va., in 1738 ; d. in Woodville, in
the same county, in September, 1804. He was re-
markable for his eloquence and patriotism and took
an active part in the political agitation that pre-
ceded the Revolution. He sat as a delegate in the
Continental congress in 1786-'88, was elected a
representative from Virginia in the 1st congress,
and re-elected to the 2d, serving from 4 March,
1789, till 2 March, 1793.
WHITE, Alexander, merchant, b. in Elgin,
Scotland, 13 March, 1814 ; d. in Lake Forest, III.,
18 March, 1872. He was one of the early settlers
of Chicago, where he arrived in the spring of 1837.
Until 1857 he was a merchant, being the first
dealer in Chicago in fine-art goods. From 1857
till 1867 he was engaged in real estate investments,
establishing the great auction sales that have
played an important part in the city's develop-
ment. Retiring from business in 1867 to devote
himself to the collection of flowers and paintings,
he purchased an estate at Lake Forest, which he
made among the most artistic in the west. In
1859 he built in his Chicago residence the first
private art-gallery in Illinois, exhibiting his paint-
ings for the benefit of the city. In 1866 he sold
this collection at auction, and in 1869 he opened
a gallery at his residence at Lake Forest with 160
works of art. Returning from Europe with a third
collection when the great fire of 1871 occurred,
his losses induced him to sell his treasures at auc-
tion the same year in New York city. His artistic
taste found further expression in the cultivation
of flowers, especially of camelias and orchids, his
collection being recognized as the most complete
in the northwest.
WHITE, Alexander, lawyer, b. in Franklin,
Robertson co., Tenn., 16 Oct., 1816. He was taken
to Alabama when five years of age, and educated
there and at the University of Tennessee, but he
volunteered in the Creek and Seminole war in
1836, and therefore was not graduated. He subse-
quently studied law with his father, John White
(1784-1842), who was one of the circuit and su-
preme court judges of Alabama. On his admission
to the bar in 1838 he practised at first as the asso-
ciate of his father, and afterward (1841-'55) as the
partner of Lewis E. Parsons at Talladega. He was
elected to congress as a Union Whig after an ex-
citing contest in a Democratic district, and served
from 1 Dec, 1851, till 3 March, 1853. In 1856 he
removed to Selma, and in 1860 he supported Bell
and Everett for president and vice-president. He
earnestly opposed secession, but decided to act
with his state when that event became inevitable.
At the close of the war he was a member of the
convention to frame a new constitution for Ala-
bama, and he was elected to the general assembly
of the state in 1872. In the following year he was
chosen to congress as a Republican, and served
from 1 Dec, 1873, till 4 March, 1875. In the lat-
ter year he was appointed an associate justice of
the U. S. court for the territory of Utah. After
holding the office for a brief term he returned to
Alabama, and in 1875 removed to Dallas, Tex.,
where he practises his profession.
WHITE, Andrew, clergyman, b. in London,
England, about 1579 ; d. there, 27 Dec, 1656. He
was educated at Douay college, France, where he
was ordained priest in 1605. After his return to
England in 1606 he was arrested, with sixteen
other priests, and sentenced to perpetual banish-
ment. He entered the Society of Jesus on 2 Feb.,
1609, returned to England at the risk of his life,
and was engaged in missionary duties there until
1619. He was subsequently professor of theology
and Hebrew in Valladolid and Seville, and of di-
vinity in Douay and Liege. In 1633 he was chosen
by the Jesuit general, Mutius Vitelleschi, to ac-
company Lord Baltimore to this country, with
some other Jesuits. After landing he devoted
himself to the conversion of the Piscataway and
Patuxent Indians, as well as to those in the neigh-
borhood of the new settlements. He returned to
Europe subsequently, and brought back more mis-
sionaries. Father White learned the language of
the Indians, and compiled a grammar, vocabulary,
and catechism. They were all supposed to be lost,
until Father William McSherry discovered the
catechism in the Jesuit archives at Rome. Father
White was summoned to sit in the first colonial
assembly of Maryland ; but his request to be ex-
cused from taking part in secular affairs was
granted. The "Extracts from the Letters of the
Missionaries," appended to his "Relatio Itineris
in Marylandiam," give some very interesting de-
tails about his labors and success among the In-
dians of Patapaco, Piscataway. and Patuxent. In
1644 he was seized by a band of Claiborne's sol-
diers and sent in irons to England, where he was
imprisoned on a charge of violating the law con-
cerning " missionary popish priests." After great
suffering he was released and banished from the
country. He petitioned his superiors to be allowed
to go to Maryland ; but his request being refused,
on the ground of his age and infirmities, he re-
turned to England under an assumed name, and
was there engaged in missionary duties. Further
accounts of him are vague and uncertain, although
the place and date of his death are given in the
official records of the Jesuit order. He wrote
" Relatio Itineris in Marylandiam," which, with
" Declaratio coloniae Domini Baronis de Balti-
moro" and "Excerpta ex Diversis Litteris Mis-
sionariorum ab anno 1635 ad annum 1638," has
been published, accompanied by a translation, by
the Maryland historical society (Baltimore, 1874).
WHITE, Andrew Dickson, educator, b. in
Homer, N. Y., 7 Nov., 1832. He was of New Eng-
land parentage, studied one year at Hobart col-
lege, N. Y., and passed the remainder of his col-
legiate course at
Yale, where he
was graduated in
1853. After grad-
uation he spent
about two years
in Europe, chiefly
at Paris and Ber-
lin, in the prosecu-
tion of historical
studies. He was
also attache to the
American legation
in St. Petersburg
for six months,
and travelled on
foot through many
of the historical lo-
calities of the con-
tinent, especially
in northern and
western France.
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He returned home in 1856, studied history for one year at Yale, and in 1857 was elected professor of history and English literature in the University of Michigan. In 1862 he resigned in consequence of