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William Seton

Author, b. in New York, Jan. 28, 1835; d. there, Mar. 15, 1905

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Seton, WILLIAM, author, b. in New York, January 28, 1835; d. there, March 15, 1905. His father was William Seton, captain in the U.S. Navy; son of Elizabeth Ann Seton (q.v.), his mother was Emily Prime. Burke’s Peerage (1900) recognized him as the head of the Seton family of Parbroath, senior cadets of the earls of Winton in Scotland. He was educated at St. John’s College, Fordham, at Mt. St. Mary’s, Emmittsburg, Md., and at the University of Bonn. He travelled extensively abroad before entering a law office in New York. Soon after his admission to the bar he answered Lincoln’s first call for troops in 1861. Disabled for a time by two wounds received in the Battle of Antietam, where he fought as captain of the Forty-first New York Volunteers, French’s Division, Sumner’s Corps, he returned to his father’s home, Cragdon, Westchester Co., New York, but went back to the front to be captain of the 16th Artillery in Grant’s campaign against Richmond. After the war he devoted himself chiefly to literature, publishing two historical novels, “Romance of the Charter Oak” (1870) and “Pride of Lexington” (1871); “The Pioneer”, a poem (1874); “Rachel‘s Fate” (1882); “The Shamrock Gone West”, and “Moira”, (1884). About 1886 he went to Europe for serious study in palaeontology, psychology, etc., and thereafter usually spent the greater part of each year in France in such pursuits. His forte was presenting scientific matters in attractive English. He issued a brief work, “A Glimpse of Organic Life, Past and Present” (1897). He was a frequent contributor of scientific articles to the “Catholic World”. “The Building of the Mountain”, a novel, was in the press at the time of his death. His Alma Mater, Mt. St. Mary’s, conferred on him the degree of LL.D. in 1890. He outlived by ten years his wife Sarah Red-wood Parrish, a Philadelphian convert from the Society of Friends. Their only child William died in infancy. He did much charitable work, especially in obtaining employment for the poor. He is buried with the Setons at Mt. St. Mary’s, Emmitsburg, Maryland.

B. RANDOLPH


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