PROMINENT PERSONS
293
and at the Virginia Union Theological Semi-
nary in 1832. He was then tutor in Hebrew
and introductory studies until- 1836, and was
successively pastor of Presbyterian churches
in Danville and Augusta county, Virginia,
from 1840 till his appointment in 1854 to the
chair of Oriental and biblical literature in
the sloop-of-war Hornet, and he was in serv-
ice until the Texan war of independence of
1836, when the new government of Texas
cr.lled him to the command of its navy, with
the rank of commodore. Resigning his com-
mission in the United States service, partly
. fiom the credit of the republic and partly
Union Semmary. From 18 1;8 to 1874 he was t u- 111
J :, ^yj o/^ lie waa £,.Qj^ jjjg Q^j^ resources, he purchased two
pastor of Hampden-Sidney College Church, ,^^11 ^u;^^ u- u i, • j r
^ ■' ^ ' small ships, which he equipped for war.
and he was moderator of the general assem- wnt-u tu^^ u -i 1 r xt r^ ^
=• With these he sailed from New Orleans
bly of the Presbyterian church in 1876.
Hampden-Sidney College gave him the de-
gree of Doctor of Divinity in 1845.
Phillips, Dinwiddle Brazier, son of Col. William Foulke Phillips and Edith Harrison Ashmore Cannon, his wife, was born in P'auquier county, Virginia. He entered the United States navy as assistant surgeon in 1847; was surgeon of the J'irginia or Mcrri- tiwc during her entire existence ; medical director of the Wise Legion and command- ed the post at White Sulphur Springs as
early in 1843, the Mexicans awaiting him
in the Gulf with a fleet of eight or ten ves-
sels, including two steamers, the Guadalupe
and Montezuma, which had been built in
England at an expense of $1,000,000. Fear-
ing the destruction of his two ships. Presi-
dent Houston repeatedly ordered Commo-
dore Moore to take shelter in Galveston bay ;
but, disregarding these orders, or failing to
receive them, Moore put out in search of the
ti.emy. A series of hot engagements en-
sued, in which the enemy were routed with
major of that legion. After the war he ^'^'-^'^J losses. Commodore Moore, however,
resided at Madison Run Station, Orange
county, Virginia. He wrote a paper entitled
"The Career of the Iron-Clad Virginia (for-
merly the Merrimac), Confederate States
Navy," which was published in "Virginia
Historical Collections," vol. vi., new series,
miscellaneous papers. He married Nannie
F., daughter of William Walden, of Rappa-
hannock county, Virginia. He was de-
was dismissed from the service by President
Houston for disobedience of orders, but the
Texan congress indemnified him for his
pecuniary losses, granting him a large tract
of land. After the annexation of Texas,
Moore and his associate Texan naval offi-
cers applied to congress to be reinstated in
the United States navy, with the rank they
had held in that of Texas. A compromise
scended from John Dinwiddle, brother of ^^^® finally passed in the shape of an appro-
Robert Dinwiddle, governor (1751-1758) priation of leave-pay from the time of annex-
(q. v.). ^t'on to the passage of the bill. Of this ap-
propriation in 1855, the share accruing to
Moore, Edwin Ward, born in Alexandria, Commodore Moore was about $17,000. He
Virginia, in 181 1 ; entered the United States subsequently resided in New York City, en-
navy as a midshipman in 1825, and became gaged in mechanical experiments and in-
heutenant in 1835. His first cruise was in ventions, and died there, October 5, 1865.