Chaplain John Brown White
John Brown White was born on March 10, 1810 in Bow, New Hampshire. His parents were David and Betsey (Carter) White. David White was a colonel in the War of 1812. Chaplain John Brown White joined the 117th Volunteer Infantry to fulfill the position left by Chaplain John D. Gillham who was forced to resign due to poor health. Based on several letters and journal entries it is told that Chaplain White baptised several members of the regiment in the Montgomery river.
Before joining the McKendree Regiment, White studied law and was admitted to the bar
in Greenville, Illinois. He earned his master’s degree from Brown University in 1835.
He was elected judge of probate in 1837. In 1838, he accepted an invitation from President
Dr. Samuel Wait of Wake Forest College to join the faculty as professor of mathematics
and natural philosophy. He later became President of Wake Forest College in 1848 when
William Hooper resigned from the position. At Wake Forest, White became ordained by
the Baptist Church in January of 1849.There was speculation that White was at odds
with members of the Wake Forest Board of Trustees due to his abolitionist beliefs.
He shocked other faculty members with a letter of resignation and eventually left
Wake Forest in 1853.
Following a brief position as president of a girl’s seminary in Brownsville, Tennessee,
White would later become the co-founder of the all-women’s school Almiria College,
which later was renamed Greenville College. White was the president of Almira College
at the time of his enlistment in the 117th Illinois Volunteer Infantry. Lieutenant
Colonel Jonathon Merriam, who was married to White’s daughter, Lucie, was especially
pushed for White’s appointment as Chaplain. White was nursed back to health by a rebel
family in Alabama when he became ill.
After the Civil War, White created a women’s school in Alton. He then returned to
continue as president of Almira College until 1878. White married Mary Powers Merriam
on April 5, 1838. and had seven children, John Conant, Annie Elizabeth, Emily, Lucy
Carter, William Henry, Mary Brown, and Juliet Poers. Mary died in 1855. He remarried
Elizabeth Richardson Wright on August 5, 1857. Chaplain John Brown White died on Feb.
12, 1887 and is buried in Montrose Cemetery in Greenville, Illinois.