Page:Encyclopedia of Virginia Biography volume 3.djvu/259

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having been intimately associated with Gen. "Stonewall" Jackson and other eminent sol- diers of the Army of Northern Virginia, he held the rank of lieutenant-colonel. Aftc- the war he was cashier of the National Val- ley IJank at Staunton, where he remained until 1866. He was that year elected pro- lessor of applied mathematics in Washing- ion College, which was soon to become Washington and Lee University, and where he achieved great success as a teacher, and had the esteem and afifection of Gen. Rob- ert E. Lee, under whom he had so long and faithfully served as a soldier. In 1873 he became principal of the McDonough Insti- tute in Alaryland, and did much to make it one of the foremost high schools of the country. There the last years of his life were spent, devoted to the instruction of youth and at spare times to writing upon subjects connected with engineering and with the Army of Northern Virginia. Among the most faithful, interesting and useful his- tories of the civil war are found to be his articles on "Chancellorsville," "Jackson's Valley Campaign," and "The Army of Northern Virginia in 1862." An introduc- tion to this last work was written by his friend and former adversary in arms, the late John Codman Ropes, the distinguished lawyer and war critic of Boston. It may be said with regard to what Col. .\llan has written upon the subject of the civil war, that his work is history. He also published several engineering brochures, and a num- ber of articles in the magazines and journals cf his time. He married, May 14, 1874, Elizabeth Randolph Preston, daughter of Mrs. Margaret Preston, the well known southern poetess. His wife and five children


survived him. He died September 17, 1889, al McDonough, Maryland.

Fauntleroy, Archibald Magill, born at

Warrenton. \'irginia, July 8, 1837, a son of Thomas Turner Fauntleroy. He was grad- uated from the University of Pennsylvania in the class of 1856, with the degree of Doctor of Medicine, and the following year became assistant surgeon in the United States army. However, he and his brother, a lieutenant in the navy, resigned when their father did, upon the formation of the Con- federate government. He then became a surgeon in the Confederate army, and was president of the board for the admission of surgeons, and chief on the medical staf^ of Gen. Joseph E. Johnston, serving with him until the battle of Seven Pines. He was then ordered to build and organize the hos- pitals at Danville, Virginia, and later had charge of the military hospital at Staunton, \'irginia, until the close of the war. After the war he engaged in general practice at Staunton, and for a number of years was superintendent of the Lunatic Asylum in that city. His contributions to medical literature include papers on bromide of po- tassium, chloral hydrate, the use of chloro- form in obstetrical practice, and a "Report upon Advance in Therapeutics," which was printed in the "Transactions" of the Vir- £;inia Medical Society. Dr. Fauntleroy died at Staunton, Virginia. June 19. 1886.

Kable, William Hartman, born in Jeffer- ?cn county. West Virginia, September 25, 1837, a son of John Kable, a farmer and m-iuufacturer. and his wife, Elizabeth Hun- ter Johnston. The Kables have been resi- dent in this country since 1684, when they