fever from the valley of the Mississippi. Besides constant pamphlets and addresses on scientific and medical subjects, he has published "Investigations, Chemical and Physiological, relative to Certain American Vertebrata" (Smithsonian institution contributions, 1856); "First Report of the Cotton Planters' Convention of Georgia on the Agricul- tural Resources of Georgia" (Augusta, 1860); " Sanitary Memoirs of the War of the Rebellion " (New York, 1869) ; " Surgical Memoirs of the War of the Rebellion " (1871) ; " Hospital Construction and Organization " (Baltimore, 1875) ; " Explora- tions of the Aboriginal Remains of Tennessee" (Smithsonian institution contributions, Washing- ton, 1876); "Reports of the Board of Health of Louisiana " (New Orleans, 1884) ; and " Medical and Surgical Memoirs " (1887).
JONES, Charles W., senator, b. in Ireland in
1834. He emigrated to the United States when
he was ten years of age, and after working at his
trade as a mechanic, settled in Pensacola, Pla.,
in 1854, studied law, and two years afterward was
admitted to the bar. He continued in practice
during the civil war, was a member of the Balti-
more National Democratic convention in 1872,
and in the same year was an unsuccessful candidate
for congress. He was a member of the Florida
legislature in 1874, was chosen U. S. senator as a
conservative Democrat in 1875, and re-elected in
1881, his term of service expiring 3 March, 1887.
JONES, David, clergyman, b. in White Clay
Creek hundred, Newcastle co., Del., 12 May, 1736 ;
d. in Chester county, Pa., 5 Feb., 1820. His grand-
father, David, who married Esther Morgan, a
daughter of Morgan ap Rhydderch, emigrated from
Cardiganshire, Wales, in 1710, and settled at Welsh
Tract, Del. After attending Hopewell academy,
N. J., and studying theology under his cousin,
Rev. Abel Morgan, of Middletown, N. J., he en-
tered the ministry of the Baptist church. His
first regular charge was the Freehold Baptist
church, N. J., of which he was the pastor from
12 Dec, 1766, until April, 1775, when, becoming
somewhat obnoxious to the Tories of that region,
he removed to Chester county, Pa., and took charge
of the Great Valley Baptist church for one year,
On 27 April, 1776, he entered the Revolutionary
army as chaplain of the 3d and 4th Pennsylvania
battalions, and on 1 Jan., 1777, he became chaplain
of Gen. Anthony Wayne, with whom he continued
until the end of the war. He narrowly escaped
being killed at the Paoli massacre. Throughout
the whole Revolutionary struggle he exercised
great power, especially in the region around Phila-
delphia, in stimulating the zeal of the patriots and
in overawing the disaffected. He had pastoral
charge of the Southampton Baptist church, Bucks
county. Pa., from 1786 till 1792, when he returned
to Chester county and resumed the charge of the
Great Valley Baptist church, with which he re-
mained until his death, with frequent and pro-
longed leaves of absence. In 1794, when his old
commander, Gen. Wayne, was sent to the north-
west, he accompanied the army as chaplain, and
when the war of 1812 began he volunteered, and
served in 1813— '15. The last occasion on which
he appeared in public was at the dedication of
the Paoli monument, 20 Sept., 1817, when he de-
livered an address. In the years 1772 and 1773
he travelled to the region of the Ohio, and
published a journal that he kept of these two
trips (Burlington, 1774; new ed., 1865). He deliv-
ered an address to the troops at Ticonderoga, 20
Oct., 1776, which was published at the time. On
20 July, 1775, at Great Valley church, on the day
of the Continental fast, he preached a sermon,
which was published shortly after under the title
" Defensive War in a Just Cause Sinless." He also
published " The Doctrine of the Laying on of lands " (Philadelphia, 1786) ; " A True History of Laying on of Hands upon Baptized Believers as such" (Burlington, 1805) ; " A Treatise on the Work of the Holy Ghost under the Gospel Dispensation " (1804) ; and " Candid Reasons of Peter Edwards examined-" (Philadelphia, 1811). Brown
university gave him the degree of A. M. in 1774. —
His son, Horatio Gates, clergyman, b. in Tredyffrin township, Chester co., Pa., 11 Feb., 1777 : d. in Roxborough, Philadelphia, Pa., 12 Dec, 1853, received an academical education, studied theology, and was ordained in 1802 at Salem, N. J., becoming pastor of the Baptist church there. In 1808 he became the first pastor of the Lower Merion Baptist church, which continued under his care for
forty-five years. He was one of the founders of the Baptist board of Foreign missions, and president of the Philadelphia Baptist association from 1829 till 1853, and it was chiefly through his influence that the latter body organized a Manual- labor school, which afterward became Haddington college. As long as the college existed he was
president of its board of trustees, and spared neither time nor money in promoting its interests. In 1812 Brown conferred on him the degree of M. A., and in 1851 the university at Lewisburg (now Bucknell), of which he was then chancellor, bestowed on him its first degree of D. D. He published a " History of the Philadelphia Baptist Association" (1832). — Horatio Gates's son, John Richter, lawyer, b. in Salem, N. J., 2 Oct., 1803 ; d. near New Berne, N. C, 23 May, 1863, was graduated in 1821 at the University of Pennsylvania, and admitted to the bar in 1827. In 1836 he was appointed one of the judges of the court of common pleas of Philadelphia county, which post he held until 1847. On retiring from the bench he settled in Sullivan county, Pa. In 1861 he raised the 58th Pennsylvania regiment, of which he was commissioned colonel. He met his death while at the head of a reconnoitering force at New Berne, N. C, just after a long march in which he had captured a considerable force of the enemy at Gum Swamp. In this expedition he was in command as acting brigadier-general of several regiments. He was a classical scholar, and carried with him to the camp his Septuagint version of the Old Testament, which he was accustomed to read daily. He was author of " The Quaker Soldier " (Philadelphia, 1858). — Another son, Horatio Gates, lawyer, b. in Roxborough, Philadelphia, Pa., 9 Jan., 1822, was graduated at the University of Pennsylvania in 1841, admitted to the bar in 1847, and entered on active practice of the law, in which he has since continued. He was in the state senate in 1875-'82, and introduced bills to secure freedom from the penalties of the Sunday law of 1794 for all persons who observed the seventh day as the Sabbath. Mr. Jones has devoted much time to historical matters. He became a member of the Historical society of Pennsylvania in 1848, was its secretary in 1849-'67, and was then chosen one of its vice-presidents, which office he still holds. He has been president of the Welsh society of Philadelphia for twenty-five years, is a member of numerous state historical societies, and in 1877 was elected an honorary fellow of the Royal historical society of Great Britain. He has also been an active member of the Baptist church, and is president of the Philadelphia Baptist association. He has published " The Levering Family " (Phdadelphia,