Source: Memorial Record of Alabama, Volume 1, p.
519-20, 1892, Reprinted
by The Reprint Company, Spartanburg, South Carolina, 1976
Dr. Richard Lemuel Butt, the talented physician and surgeon at Midway,
Bullock county, Ala. was born in Columbia county, Ga, November 1, 1824,
a
son of Moses and Priscilla (Banks) Butt - the former a native of Halifax
county, N.C., born September 23, 1782, and the later born September 20,
1902
in Elbert county, Ga. Moses Butt was reared a planter, was
six feet high,
well proportioned, very strong and active as an acrobat. At the
age of
eighteen he left his native county with his parents for the state of
Georgia, but on the way his father died in camp in the state of South
Carolina. Moses, however, continued on his way, accompanied by his
widowed
mother and settled in Columbia county, Ga., where he married, in 1822
acquired a fortune of $200,000 and died in his sixty-seventh year. He
had
attended school only six months in his life. He was scrupulously
honest,
industrious and genial; was devoted to his family, was devout, and a
leader
in church and social circles. He was a captain in the Florida was
of 1836,
but never sought public office of any sort of notoriety. His
second wife,
Miss Banks, died February 23, 1855. She was a daughter of Ralph Banks, a
distinguished native of Georgia. Mr.. Banks was a gentleman of
noble
qualities and exemplary habits, and an example of the highest type of
Christian manhood. He married Mary Jones, a lady of exceptionally
fine
attainments, and to their union were born nine sons and four daughters,
all
noted for their honesty and virtue. Moses Butt, grandfather of Dr.
Richard
L. was a native of Wales and came to America about the year 1752,
in
company with five brothers, and settled on the Tar river, N.C., where he
successfully engaged in planting, but determined to seek more fertile
country, and was on his way to Georgia when he was overtaken by death,
as
before related, while camping in South Carolina. He was an
Episcopalian and
a sincere Christian. Dr. Richard Lemuel Butt is one of a family of
five
sons and three daughters, of whom his twin-brother, John H., died in
1883 -
a merchant and a planter. The doctor received his literary
education at the
Wynnton academy, and graduated in medicine from the university of the
city
of New York, March 11, 1846. He at once began practicing at
Columbus, Ga.
and July 29, of the same year, married Miss Eliza C. Leonard, who was
born
in Morgan county, Ga. and who died in Memphis, Tenn, November 15,
1861,
leaving six children, three of whom still survive, viz.: Frances
P., wife
of C. S. Tucker of Thayer, Mo: Mary Virginia, widow of the late Michael
Wood, of Las Vegas, N.M., and Richard L., Jr. a conductor on the Alabama
Midland railroad.
The second marriage of Dr. Butt was with Mrs. Martha J. Gamsnell,
daughter
of James Jackson and cousin of the famous Stonewall Jackson. This
lady died
August 12, 1870, and for his third wife, the doctor selected November
22,
1876 Mrs. Mary E. Henderson, daughter of William Moss, a native of New
York,
and his wife Polly Beecher, who was born in Connecticut and was a
relative
of the cultivated divine, Henry Ward Beecher. William Moss moved
from New
York to Georgia, about the year 1819, by wagon, and settled in Elbert
county, where he was engaged in planting and merchandising until his
death,
October 28, 1850, and in Elbert county was Mrs. Butt born and educated.
Dr.
Butt practiced at Columbus, Ga. three years, then for three years at
Talbotton, Ga, and in 1853 removed to Midway, Ala, where he followed his
profession until 1858 when he went to Memphis, Tenn. While in that
city the
war came on, on April 19, 1861, he was appointed surgeon in Gen. William
Hicks, Jackson's staff, with whom he remained until the latter's death.
March 10, 1862; he was then appointed to Gen. Forrest's staff, but by
his
own request was restored to the staff of Gen. Jackson. This
position he
held until the latter part of 1864, when, by request of his wife, he was
appointed to hospital duty at Columbus, Ga. where April 19, 1865, he
surrendered to Gen. Wilson. He then resumed practice at Memphis,
but in
July, 1875, returned to Midway, where he is regarded as on of the most
competent practitioners of the county, and peerless as a surgeon.
He is
devoted to his profession and had made specialties of surgery and
obstetrics, some of his operations in both having been wonderfully
successful. He stand high in the estimation of his fellow
practitioners and
is a member of the National and State Medical associations, and was once
president of the Bullock county Medical society. He is devoted to
his
family and is an ardent member of the Methodist church, while his wife
is a
devout Baptist.
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