RANDALL, Alexander Williams, statesman, b. in Ames, Montgomery co., X. V., 31 Oct., 1819; d. in Elmira, N. Y., 25 July. 1872. His father, Phineas, a native of Massachusetts, resided in Mont- gomery county, N. Y.. from 1818 till 1851, was judge of the court of common pleas there in 1837-'41, and removing to Waukesha,Wis., died there in 1853. Alexan- der received a thorough aca- demic educa- tion, studied law, was admit- ted to the bar, and began to practise in Wau- kesha in 1840. He became soon afterward post- master of that place, and in 1847 was chnst'ii a member of the
convention that
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framed the state constitution. He then devoted him-elf to his profession till 1855. when he was elected to the state assembly. The same year he was an unsuccessful candidate for the attorney- generalship, and was appointed judge of the Mil- waukee circuit court to fill an unexpired term. In 1857, and again in 1859, he was elected governor of Wisconsin, and at the beginning of the rivil war, and pending the convening of the legislature, in extra session, he called the 2d regiment into ex- istence, and used the public funds in advance of lawful appropriation ; but he was fully sustained by the legislature when it assembled. At the close of his gubernatorial term, 1 Jan., 1861, he was dis- suaded from his purpose of entering the army by President Lincoln, and appointed U. S. minister to Italy. On his resignation and return in 1862, he was made first assistant postmaster-general, and in July, 1866, postmaster-general, and served in that capacity till March, 1869.
RANDALL, David Austin, author, b. in Col-
chester, Conn., 14 Jan., 1813 ; d. in Columbus. Ohio,
27 June, 1884. He was educated at country schools
and at Canandaigua, N. Y., academy, and became
a Baptist clergyman. He was chaplain of the Ohio
asylum for the insane in 1854'66, pastor of a
church in Columbus in 1858-'66, and correspond-
ing secretary of the Ohio Baptist conference in
1850-'63. Mr. Randall was for many years editor
of the " Washingtonian," the first temperance
paper in Ohio, and in 1845-'53 edited the " Cross
and Journal," a Baptist newspaper. He was widely
known as a lecturer, and was also a member of a
book-selling firm and director of a bank. He
travelled in Egypt and Palestine in 1861-'2, and
wrote " God's Handwriting in Egypt, Sinai, and
the Holy Land " (2 vols., Philadelphia, 1862), and
" Ham-Mishkan, the Wonderful Tent : a Study of
the Structure, Significance, and Symbolism of the
Hebrew Tabernacle " (Cincinnati, 1886).
RANDALL, Georce Maxwell. P. E. bishop,
b. in Warren, R. I.. 23 Nov., 1810 ; d. in Denver.
Col.. 28 Sept., 1873. He was graduated nt lirown
in 1835, and at the Episcopal general theological
seminary. New York, in 1838. Ilr was ordained
deacon in St. Mark's church. Warren. 17 July,
1838. by Bishop Griswold. and pi-ir-t. in the same
church, 2 Nov., 1839, by the sum' ln-lmp. His
first parochial charge was that of the Church of
the Ascension. Fall River, Mass. In 1844 he ac-
cepted the rectorship of the Church of the Messiah,
Boston, Mass.. which post he held for twenty-one
years. He received the degree of D. D. from B'rown
in 1856. He was a clerical deputy from the diocese
nf Massachusetts from 1850 till 1865, inclusive, and
was chosen secretary to the house of clerical and lay
deputies in 1862 and 1865. He was appointed by the
general convention to be missionary bishop of Colo-
rado, and was consecrated in Trinity church. Bos-
ton, Mass., 28 Dec.. 1865. Bishop Randall published
numerous sermons, addresses, and lectures, and
contributed freely to church literature, chiefly
through the columns of " The Christian Witness
and Church Advocate," of which he was editor for
many years. He also published a tract entitled
Why I am a Churchman." which has had a very
large circulation, and " Observations on Confir-
mation " (6th ed.. 1868).
RANDALL, James Ryder, song-writer, b. in
Baltimore, Md.. 1 Jan., 1839. He was educated at
Georgetown college, D. C., but was not graduated,
and afterward travelled in South America. When
he was a young man he went to Louisiana and
edited a newspaper at Point Coupee, and after-
ward was engaged on the New Orleans " Sunday
Delta." His delicate constitution prevented him
from entering the Confederate army, but he wrote
much in support of the southern cause. His
" Maryland, my Maryland." which was published
in Baltimore in April. 1861, was set to music, and
became widely popular. It has been called "the
Marseillaise of the Confederate cause." Other
poems from his pen were " The Sole Sentry," " Ar-
lington," " The Cameo Bracelet." " There's Life
in the Old Land Yet," and " The Battle-Cry of the
South." After the war he went to Augusta, Ga.,
where he became associate editor of " The Consti-
tutionalist," and in 1866 its editor-in-chief.
RANDALL. John Witt, poet, b. in Boston. 6
Nov.. 1813 ; d. there. 27 Jan.. 1892. He was gradu-
ated at Harvard and at the medical department.
While in college he devoted his attention to scien-
tific studies, especially entomology, and also culti-
vated his taste for poetry. His attainments as a
naturalist gained for him the honorary appoint-
ment as zoologist in the department of inverte-
brate animals to the South sea exploring expe-
dition sent out by the United States under Com-
mander Charles Wilkes. But the delays in the
sailing of the expedition caused him to resign the
appointment, and he then turned his attention to
his favorite pursuits. He had been largely occu-
pied with the cultivation of an ancestral country-
seat in Stow, Mass., and had accumulated one of the
rarest and most original collections of engravings
in the United States. Dr. Randall has contributed
a paper on the "Crustacea" to the "Transactions
of the Philadelphia Academy of Natural Sciences,"
and two on insects t" the "Proceedings of the
Boston Society of Natural History," and he pre-
pared a volume on the "Animals and Plants of
Maine" for the geological survey of that state, but
the manuscript was lost. Besides doing other
literary work, he has written six volumes of poems,
of which only one has been published. "Consola-
tions of Solitude" (Boston. 1856).
RANDALL. Robert Richard. philanthropist, b. in New Jersey about 1740; d. in New York city. 5 June, 1801. He was a son of Thomas Randall, who was one of the committee of 1IH I chi i~, n t . i CMMtrol the affair of t he city. .t' New York in 17?.