Hugh T. Nelson

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Hugh T. Nelson, M. D.


Biographical Information

Date of birth 1845
Date of death 1906
Place of death City of Charlottesville
Spouse Mary “Polly” James Gilliam, m. 1827
Children 3
Profession Physician
Instructor, clinical surgery

Hugh T. Nelson, M. D. (1845-1906) was a Civil War veteran, physician, instructor in clinical surgery at the University of Virginia and for many years he was a member of the City Council.

Early life and education

Hugh Thomas Nelson was born in Albemarle County, the son of Robert W. and Virginia Lafayette Nelson. Hugh Nelson entered the Confederate army in the second year of the war and served to the end. After the war he studied medicine at the University of Virginia, began his practice in Halifax county.

Career & Public life

Dr. Nelson moved to Charlottesville in 1891. He was a member of the State Medical Examining Board, and instructor in the medical department of the University of Virginia, president of the Virginia State Medical Society, member of the National Association of Railway Surgeons and other such organizations.

City Council

Dr. H. T. Nelson was a member of the City Council.


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Personal life and death

In 1827 he married Mary “Polly” James Gilliam, of Powhatan. They had two surviving children. Dr. Hugh Thomas Nelson, 60 years old, died the afternoon of March 26, 1906 after a week’s illness of pneumonia.

Notable family members

Dr. H. T. Nelson's father, Dr Robert William Nelson Sr. (1822-1908) was Charlottesville’s city physician until his death in [[[1908]], aged 86.

On both sides of his family, Dr. H. T. Nelson was a great-grandson of Gen. Thomas Nelson, a signer of the Declaration of Independence (1776) and commander of the Virginia troops at Yorktown. Thomas Nelson Jr. (1738-1789) was a planter, soldier and statesman. In 1781, Thomas Jefferson declined reelection as Governor due to his inability to serve the needs of a state under siege. General Nelson succeeded Jefferson and served as both Civil Governor and Commander in chief of the Virginia Militia. Both the Continental Army and French forces utilized the skills of the Virginia units in the Siege of Yorktown in the autumn of 1781. Finally overcome by illness in October of that year, General Nelson retired from public service. He died at one of his estates, in Hanover County, in 1789 at the age of 50.

Biography: Sketches of The Dead (1920)

Hugh Thomas Nelson, M. D., by Hugh Thomas Nelson, Jr.

Hugh Thomas Nelson, a distinguished physician of Virginia, was privileged as a youth to be prominently associated with the great war for Southern independence. He was born at Cloverfield, Albemarle County, Virginia, in 1845, the son of Robert W. and Virginia L. Nelson, and entered the military' service in July, 1862, just after the successful campaign before Richmond.

He was first a private in the Morris' Artillery of Hanover County but was subsequently on detached duty at the headquarters of the chief of artillery through the campaigns in Virginia, Maryland and Pennsylvania, until the capture of his battery at the "bloody angle near Spottsylvania Court House. He was then transferred to troop F, Fourth Regiment of Cavalry, Fitzhugh Lee's Brigade. During his cavalry service he had two horses shot from under him, one at Cold Harbor and one at Rude's Hill, in the Valley. After an illness in the hospital he was detained as a courier for General Breckenridge, and went with him to Carolina. While serving as a courier it became his duty to carry to President Davis, at Danville, the first tidings of the surrender of the Army of Northern Virginia. He was present without the building where the last cabinet meeting of the Confederate States government was held. Returning to Virginia in June 1865, he was paroled at Richmond, and after graduating from Washington and Lee University at Lexington and teaching school for several years, he was graduated in medicine at the University of Virginia, in 1875. He practiced his profession in Halifax County, and then removed to Charlottesville, where he resided from 1881 until 1906, the date of his death.

He contributed numerous scientific papers to medical literature; was president of the Medical Society of Virginia; was for four years secretary of the Medical Examining Board of the State, and then president of that body, an honor which he resigned to become instructor in clinical surgery at the University of Virginia. For many years he was a member of the City Council, and was instrumental in obtaining for the city a modern water and sewerage system.


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References


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