Orleans Parish, LAGenWeb
Our Families' Journeys Through Time
Submitted by Mike Miller
Alexander, William McFaddin, D.D.;
LL.D. --New Orleans.--Was born at the old family homestead, near Union,
Monroe county, Va., (now West Virginia), Nov. 7, 1861; son of Michael
Caperton Alexander, whose birthplace was the same as that of the son.
The father was the son of a Virginia planter, but on account of
threatened failing health, removed to Beaumont, Tex., previous to the
Civil war, and there, with his brother and brother-in-law, organized the
firm of "Ross & Alexander," a lumber and mercantile firm which built the
first saw-mill at Beaumont. Mr. Alexander was thus one of the pioneer
lumbermen and merchants of the Southwest. Mr. Alexander's health was
restored, his business prospered, and on Dec. 13, 1860, he was married
in Beaumont to Miss Sarah L. McFaddin, a daughter of William McFaddin, a
large ranch owner of Texas, and who served under Gen. Sam Houston in the
army that achieved independence for Texas. He took part in the battle of
San Jacinto, and was present at the capture of Santa Anna. William
McFaddin's sons are numbered among the wealthy citizens of Texas, and
are prominently identified with the affairs of the Lone Star state. Mr.
Alexander in the summer of 1861, with his bride of a few months,
returned to his old Virginia home on a visit. While there the war-cloud
burst and, leaving his wife under his father's roof, he enlisted in the
Confederate army under Col. Barbee. After a time, he was paroled on
account of illness. However, he remained in Virginia during the war and
for four years after the war, when he returned to Texas and became a
planter; later he became associated with a lumber company and continued
this connection until his retirement from business activities. He died
at Beaumont, Feb. 10, 1912, aged 75 years. He accumulated a comfortable
fortune. He is survived by his widow, one son, Rev. William McFaddin
Alexander of New Orleans, and one daughter, Miss Sibbie V. The widow and
daughter reside at Beaumont. A son and daughter are deceased. Mr.
Alexander was a Presbyterian elder, and came from a long line of
Presbyterians originally from Scotland. His family is the Virginia
branch of Alexanders, who have for generations been prominent in church,
state and nation. As is well-known, the Virginia Alexanders trace their
descent in direct line back to the Earls of Stirling in Scotland.
Stirling is one of the most historic spots in Scotland--the former seat
of kings and the ''key to the Highlands." The castle, the former seat of
the Alexanders, is still standing and is one of the best preserved
castles of the United Kingdom and one of the show places of Europe. It
now belongs to the crown by confiscation. Sir William Alexander, poet
and man of affairs, was the last Earl of Stirling. The paternal
grandfather of Rev. W. McF. Alexander was John Ervin Alexander,
great-grandfather Capt. Michael Alexander, and great-great-grandfather
James Alexander; all of whom were natives of Virginia. Previous to the
Revolutionary war, James Alexander went from Augusta--now
Rockbridge--county, Va., to Union, Monroe county, though at that time
there was no such place as Union, the whole region then being a
wilderness inhabited only by Indians. He selected the present sight of
Union, cleared and planted a field, built a house and returned to the
old home to be married. On his return with his bride, he found the house
burned down and the field laid waste. The Indians had made a raid.
Nothing daunted, the house was rebuilt and the field replanted, and from
this lonely dwelling in the heart of the wilderness grew the ancestral
home of the subject of this sketch. William McFaddin Alexander was
educated in the private and public schools of Beaumont, in a private
academy at Woodville, Tex., following which he returned to Virginia for
his college course in Washington and Lee university. Then he entered
Union Theological seminary, at Hampden Sidney, Va., completing the
course in 1887. He then became pastor of the Presbyterian church at
Bainbridge, Ga., remaining there three years; after which he became
pastor of the Alabama Street Presbyterian church in Memphis, Tenn.,
where he remained 8 years. In the summer of 1899, he came to New Orleans
as pastor of the Prytania Street Presbyterian church, which he continues
to occupy at this time. The degree of D.D. was conferred on him by two
universities the same week, the Southwestern Presbyterian university and
Washington and Lee university, the latter his Alma Mater. In 1911, the
degree of LL.D. was conferred on him by the University of Georgia, a
university that throughout its history has been rather chary in
conferring honorary degrees. Dr. Alexander has been prominently
identified with the progress of the Presbyterian church in the South. On
June 24, 1891, Dr. Alexander was married to Miss Ceneilla Bower of
Georgia, a daughter of Judge Isaac E. Bower, who for years was judge of
the Superior court of the southwestern district of Georgia, and who was
finally succeeded by his son Judge Byron B. Bower. The Bower family has
been prominent in Georgia since a time prior to the Revolutionary war,
in which several representatives of the family participated, as did the
great-grandfather of Mrs. Alexander. Dr. and Mrs. Alexander have one
child, a daughter, Miriam Caperton.
Source: Louisiana: Comprising
Sketches of Parishes, Towns, Events, Institutions, and Persons, Arranged
in Cyclopedic Form (volume 3), pp. 26-27. Edited by Alcée Fortier,
Lit.D. Published in 1914, by Century Historical Association.
Parish Coordinator: Marsha Holley
State Coordinator:
Marsha Holley
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