Texas Archival Resources Online

TABLE OF CONTENTS


Descriptive Summary

Biographical Note

Scope and Contents

Restrictions

Index Terms

Administrative Information

Description of Series

Inventory

University of Texas, Center for American History

A Guide to the Edwin Pinckney Becton Papers, 1862-1870



Descriptive Summary

Creator:Becton, Edwin Pinckney
Title:Edwin Pinckney Becton Papers
Dates:1862-1870
Abstract:Transcripts and two original letters from the Civil War correspondence of Becton (1834-1901), physician at Tarrant and Sulphur Springs, with his wife Mary and transcripts of Becton's speeches concern his activities as surgeon in the 22nd Regiment, Texas Infantry, during the Civil War as a member of the Texas Legislature from Hopkins County (1868-1869 and as a candidate for election.
Extent:2 inches
Language:Materials are written in English.
Repository: Center for American History, The University of Texas at Austin

Biographical Note

Edwin Pinckney Becton, physician, Confederate soldier, legislator, and state health official, son of Eleanor E. (Sharpe) and John May Becton, was born in Gibson County, Tennessee, on June 27, 1834. In 1841 the family moved to San Augustine, Texas. Becton attended Austin College and an academy in Rusk County and studied medicine under a Dr. A. R. Hamilton in private offices in New Danville, Texas, and later in Nashville, Tennessee, before entering the medical department of the University of Nashville, where he graduated with honors on March 2, 1857. He did postgraduate work at the University of Louisville, 1873-74, the University of Maryland, 1879-80, and Tulane University, 1885-86. In 1862 he entered the Confederate Army as a private in the company of Capt. J. F. Pegue of the Waterhouse Regiment. He became assistant surgeon in the army and served with the Twenty-second Regiment, Texas Infantry, under Richard B. Hubbard. After the war Becton practiced at Tarrant (Hopkins County) and Sulphur Springs and also represented Hopkins County in the Twelfth Texas Legislature, 1870-71. He was president of the Medical Association of Texas (later the Texas Medical Association) in 1886. In 1895 he was appointed superintendent of the Texas School for the Blind at Austin. In addition to being an active Presbyterian, Becton was a Royal Arch Mason, a member of the International Order of Odd Fellows, a Knight of Pythias, and a member of the Knights and Ladies of Honor Lodge. Becton married Mary Eliza Dickson on November 17, 1857. They had one son and two daughters. After her death in 1866, he married Mrs. Olivia L. Smith in 1867. They had three children. He died in Austin on January 14, 1901.

Information taken from Handbook of Texas Online entry on Becton.

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Scope and Contents

Transcripts and two original letters from the Civil War correspondence of Becton with his wife Mary and transcripts of Becton's speeches concern his activities as surgeon in the 22nd Regiment, Texas Infantry, during the Civil War as a member of the Texas Legislature from Hopkins County (1868-1869 and as a candidate for election.

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Restrictions

Access Restrictions

Unrestricted access.

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Index Terms

Subjects
Becton, Edwin Pinckney.
Hopkins County, Texas.
Confederate States of America—Army—Infantry--Twenty-Second Texas Regiment.
Physicians.
Politics and politicians.

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Administrative Information

Preferred Citation

Edwin Pinckney Becton Papers, 1862-1870, Center for American History, The University of Texas at Austin.

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Detailed Description of the Papers

 

Inventory

box
2Q43Transcripts of letters, 1862-1864 (2 copies)
Speeches
box
3S143Oversize letters, 1863

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