230
\' I RG IX I A B lOG R A PH Y
living in Columbia, Tyrrell county, he was
elected to the medical staff of the Eastern
I^unatic Asylum, remaining in charge of the
male department of that institution until
Alay, 1887. While in Manchester, Virginia,
he engaged in the banking and drug busi-
ness, was a member of the city council, and
for nearly ten years he was president of
the board of health. He was married, Octo-
ber 4, 1853, to a daughter of John S. Cocke,
of Albemarle county, \'irginia
Minor, Charles Landon Carter, born De- cember 3. 1835, ■t Edgewood, Hanover county, \'irginia, son of Lucius H. Minor, I'.sq.. and Catherine Frances Berkeley, his wife. His paternal grandfather was Gen. John Minor, of Fredericksburg, Virginia, who married I^ucy Landon Carter, of Cleve, and his mother's father was Dr. Carter Berkeley, of Hanover county, who mar- ried Miss Frances Page, daughter of Gov. John Page of Rosewell. He was taught ii\ home by his father and later attended a private school in Lynchburg, Virginia, where one of the teachers was Profes- sor Peters, afterwards of the University of Virginia. He entered the L^niversity of Virginia, and graduated in 1858 with the degree of Master of Arts. Just before tak- ing his degree he had made an engagement t.> teach with Professor Lewis Minor Cole- man at Hanover Academy, which was pre- vented by Professor Coleman's appoint- ment to the chair of Latin in the University of Virginia. He then became assistant re- s])ectively of Mr. William Dinwiddie in Al- bemarle county, the Rev. Dr. l'hili])s at the Diocesan School, the \'irgini;i l'"cm;ile In- stitute in Staunti>n. X'irginia. and with Col. Leroy Broun in Albemarle county, Virginia.
\\'hen the civil war began, he entered the
Confederate army as a private in Munford's
Second \'irginia Cavalry Regiment, and saw
active service at Manassas, in the valley
campaign under Stonewall Jackson, and in
the battles around Richmond. In I8^)2, by
competitive examination, he was appointed
lieutenant and then captain of ordnance, and
was assigned to Gen. Sam Jones, then com-
manding the department of Southwest Vir-
ginia. He followed Gen. Jones to Charles-
ten, South Carolina, when he took com-
mar.d of that department in June, 1864, and
some months later was assigned to duty as
executive oflicer at the Richmond Arsenal
imder Gen. Gorgas, where he remained un-
til the close of the war. After the war he
opened a private school at his old home in
Hanover county, but soon accepted the pres-
if'ency of the Alaryland Agricultural Col-
lege. He subsequently opened a school in
Lynchburg, from which he was elected to
a chair in the University of the South at
Sewanee, Tennessee, whence he returned to
\'irginia to accept the presidency of the
\'irginia Agricultural and Mechanical Col-
lege just opened at Blacksburg. Here he re-
mained for eight years, doing much to es-
tablish that institution upon the firm basis
which it has since occupied. In 1880 he
]>urchased the Shenandoah \'alley .Academy
at Winchester. \'irginia, where he did a hne
work for years, but an e])idemic of scaidet
fever and the loss of his wife caused him to
It.ive \ irginia to accept the charge of St.
P.-iul's School, ill I'.altimore, in 1S88. He
afterwards became associate principal with
his old friend and kinsman, L. M. Black-
ford, at the l'pisco!)al High School, near
.Alexandria. \ irginia. In Baltimore, during
the latter vears of his life, he devoted much