latter commander in the brief campaign in the Shenandoah valley, participated in theT battle of Winchester, and was mortally wounded at Cedar Creek while rallying his troops.
RAMSEY, Alexander anatomist, b. probably
in London, England, in 1754: d. in Parsonsfield.
Me.. 04 Nov.. 1S04. He studied medicine under
George Cruikshank in London for several years,
and became famous for his anatomical preparations.
He came to this country about 1800. and delivered
a short course of lectures on anatomy and physi-
ology in Columbia college. He possessed much pro-
fessional learning, but his vanity, arrogance, and
pomp, combined with his grotesque person, inter-
fered with his success as a teacher, and won him
the name of " the Caliban of science." He adopted
the theorv that the bite of a venomous snake was
rendered "innoxious by alkalies, and died from the
results of an experiment on himself. He published
" Anatomy of the Heart, Cranium, and Brain "
(Edinburgh, 1813), and " Plates on the Brain "
(London. 1813).
RAMSEY, Alexander, secretary of war. b. near
Harrisburg, Pa.. 8 Sept., 1815. He was educated
at Lafayette college, and in 1828 became clerk in
the register's office of his native county. lie was
secretary of the Electoral college of Pennsylvania
in 1840,'the next year was clerk of the state house
of representatives,
was elected to con-
gress as a Whig in
184,'. and served till
. He was chair-
man of the state
central committee
of Pennsylvania in
, and was ap-
pointed first terri-
torial governor of
Minnesota in 1849,
holding office till
1853. During this
service he nego-
tiated a treaty at
Mendota for the ex-
tinction of the title
of the Sioux half-
breeds to the lands
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on Lake Pepin, and two with the Sioux nation by which the TJ. S. government acquired all the lands in Minnesota west of Mississippi river, thus opening that state to colonization. He also made treaties wit h t he Chippewa Indians on Red river in 1851 and 1853. He became mayor of St. Paul, Minn., in 1855, was governor of the state in 1860-'3, and in the latter year was elected to the U. S. senate as a Re- publican, holding his seat in 1863-'75. and serving as chairman of the committees on Revolutionary claims and pensions, on post-roads and on territo- ries. He became secretary of war in 1879, suc- ceeding George W. McCrary, and held office till the close of Hayes's administration. He was appointed by President Arthur, in 1882, a member of the Utah commission, under the act of congress known as the Edmunds bill (see EDMUNDS, GEORGE F.), con- tinuing in that service till 1880. In 1887 he wa- a delegate to the centennial celebration of the adop- tion of the constitution of the United States.
RAMSEY, James Gattys McGregor, author,
b. in Knox county, Tenn.. in 1706 : d. fn Knoxville.
Tenn., in 1884. His father, Francis A. Ramsey,
(17601819), emigrated to the west early in life,
and became secretary of the state of "Franklin."
which was subsequent!) admitted to thr Union
under the name of Tennessee. The son was lib-
erally educated, and studied medicine, receiving
the degree of M. D., but never practised his prol'es-
sion. In early manhood he engaged in banking,
and in later days he was elected president of the
Bank of Tennessee, at Knoxville. While yet a
young man he began the collection of material for
a history of Tennessee. The papers of Gov. Sevier
and Gov. Shelby were placed in his hands, and from
them and other valuable documents he published
the " Annals of Tennessee to the End of the Eigh-
teenth Century " (Charleston, S. C., 1853). He also
founded the first historical society in the state, and
at his death was president of the one at Nashville,
which he left in a flourishing condition. When
Tennessee seceded from the Union he was appointed
financial agent for the southern wing of the Con-
federacy. He joined the Confederate army on its
retreat from Knoxville, and remained with it till
its final dissolution. During the occupation of
that city by National troops the house in which
his father had lived and he had been born was
burned, and all the valuable historical papers it
contained were destroyed. In consequence of the
war he lost most of his property.
RAND, Asa, clergyman, b. in Rindge. N. H., 6
Aug., 1783 : d. in Ashburnham, Mass., 24 Aug.,
1871. He was graduated at Dartmouth in 1806,
and ordained as a minister of the Congrega-
tional church in January, 1809. After a pastor-
ate of thirteen years' duration at Gorham, Me., he
edited the "Christian Mirror" at Portland, Me.,
in 1822-'5. afterward conducted the "Recorder"
and the " Youth's Companion " at Boston, and in
1833 established a book-store and printing-office
at Lowell. He published the " Observer " at this
place, lectured against slavery, and was then pas-
tor of churches at Pornpey and Peterborough. N. Y.
He published " Teacher's Manual for Teaching in
English Grammar" (Boston, 1832), and "The
Slave-Catcher caught in the Meshes of the Eter-
nal Law " (Cleveland, 1852). His son. William
Wilberforce, author, b. in Gorham, Me., 8 Dec.,
1816, was graduated at Bowdoin in 1837, at the
Theological seminary at Bangor, Me., in 1840. au-1
in the latter year was licensed to preach a* a (.'mi-
gregational minister. He was pastor of the Re-
formed Dutch church of Canastota, N. Y., from
1841 till 1845, editor for the American tract so-
ciety, New York city, in 1848-'72. and has since
been its publishing secretary. He is the author
of " Songs of Zion " (New York, 1850 ; enlarged ed..
1866) ; " Dictionary of the Bible for General Use "
(1860; enlarged and largely rewritten, 1887); and
other smaller books.
RAND, Benjamin Howard. educator, b. in Charlestown, Mass., 16 Feb., 17!i2: d. in Philadelphia, Pa., 9 June, 1862. He settled in Philadelphia early in the 19th century, and was engaged in the
teaching of penmanship, in which for more than twenty-five years he had a high ivpuiatii'U. Mr. Rand published "The American Penman " (Philadelphia, 1856); "Rand's Penmanship" (8 ]>art-i: "Rand's Copy-Book " (9 parts) ; and "Appendix" (5 parts). These books ran through several editions, and at the time of his death the sile of the different numbers had aggregated more than one and a half million copies. His daughter, Marion Howard, author, b. in Philadelphia. Pa.. "> Jan.. 1824, d. in Grahamville. S. ('., 9 June. 1s4'.i. contributed largely to "The Offering." The Young
People's Book," "Graham's Magazine." "Godey'a Lady's Bonk," and other periodicals. Specimen I her poetry are contai 1 in Read's " Female Poets of America" and in May's "American Female Poets." His son, Benjamin Howard, physician.