George W. Rust
George W. Rust | |
---|---|
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates from the Page district | |
In office September 7, 1863 – March 15, 1865 | |
Preceded by | John R. Booten |
Succeeded by | n/a |
Personal details | |
Born | Loudoun County, Virginia, US | April 7, 1815
Died | May 12, 1888 (aged 73) Baltimore, Maryland, US |
Political party | Conservative |
Spouse | Mary Mahala Wood |
Alma mater | Jefferson Medical College |
Profession | medical doctor, politician |
Military service | |
Allegiance | Virginia Confederate States |
George W. Rust (April 7, 1815 – May 12, 1888) was a nineteenth-century Virginia doctor and plantation owner who during the American Civil War served in various Confederate hospitals, as well as the Virginia House of Delegates from September 7, 1863 until the war's end, and later in the Virginia Constitutional Convention of 1868.
Early and family life
The son of Albert and Annie Rust, born after the War of 1812, he studied medicine in Philadelphia and received a medical degree from Jefferson Medical College in 1846.
He married Mary Mahala Wood on November 16, 1847. They had one daughter, Julia Rust Wharton (1848-1878) who died in childbirth. Relatives included General George Rust who had also served in the Virginia General Assembly as well as operated several plantations and became Superintendent of the U.S. Arsenel in Harper's Ferry in the 1830s. Another relative, Albert Rust moved to Arkansas and became a Confederate General during that war.
Career
Dr. Rust practiced medicine in Luray, Page County, Virginia both before and after the American Civil War. He owned slaves before the war began, as had many of his relatives. In November 1861, Dr. Rust went to Mount Jackson in Page County, Virginia where he became a contract physician at the Confederate Military hospital. By September 1862, he had accepted a position and became Acting Assistant Surgeon of the General Hospital at Lynchburg. He was also elected to the Virginia House of Delegates to represent Page County in 1863, and served part-time, although he had moved further south to Lynchburg.
After Virginia ceded defeat, Dr. Rust took the required loyalty oath and was elected a delegate to the Virginia Constitutional Convention of 1868, representing Page and Shenandoah Counties. A Conservative as was Moses Walton, who also represented the same counties and was a lifelong resident of the Shenandoah Valley, Dr. Rust opposed various penalties that the majority proposed to impose upon former Confederates.
Death
Rust died in Luray in 1888, survived by his widow, son-in-law Rev. Henry Marvin Wharton (a former lawyer and Confederate who became a Baptist minister, author and head chaplain of Confederate Veterans), and was buried at Green Hill Cemetery in Luray.