Person:Alexander Fleet (3)

Watchers
Col. Alexander Frederick Fleet
m. 1842
  1. Col. Alexander Frederick Fleet1843 - 1911
  2. David Fleet
  3. Benjamin Fleet1846 - 1864
  4. Maria Louise Fleet1847 - 1917
  5. Florence Fleet1852 - 1903
  6. Betsy Pollard Fleet1854 - 1904
  7. James William Fleet1856 - 1926
  • HCol. Alexander Frederick Fleet1843 - 1911
  • WBelle Seddon
  1. William Alexander Fleet1883 - 1918
  • HCol. Alexander Frederick Fleet1843 - 1911
  • WJosie Jeffries1855 - 1923
Facts and Events
Name Col. Alexander Frederick Fleet
Gender Male
Birth? 6 Jun 1843 King and Queen, Virginia, United States
Marriage to Belle Seddon
Marriage to Josie Jeffries
Military? From 1896 to 1910 Culver, Marshall, Indiana, United StatesSuperintendent of Culver Military Academy
Death? 4 Sep 1911 Atlanta, Fulton, Georgia, United States
Burial? Bruington, King and Queen, Virginia, United StatesBruington Baptist Church Cemetery

Colonel Alexander Frederick Fleet

  • Culver City Herald of 2 Oct 1896
CADETS WILL GO TO INDIANA. New Home for the Students Burned Out at Mexico, Mo. The Missouri Military Academy, which burned at Mexico, Mo., last week, will resume work in the Culver Military Academy, Culver City, Ind. Mr. Culver, the founder of Culver Academy, is a wealthy citizen of St. Louis aud president of the St. Louis Wrought Iron Range Company. He will pay the railroad fare of the cadets to St. Louis and will send them by a special car to Culver Academy Monday, Oct. 5. Col. Fleet will be superintendent of the newly consolidated academies and will take his old faculty with him. Culver Academy is absolutely fireproof and is situated on one of the most beautiful lakes in northern Indiana. The injured cadets are recovering.
  • Chicago Herald
On the evening of October 5th Head master Col. Alexander F. Fleet arrived along with the 72 cadets and five faculty members among who were Hugh Greiner and Hugh Glasswork; from there they went to the lake pier boarded the steamboats Peerless I and Aubeenaubee for the short trip to the Academy. Col. Alexander Frederick Fleet, Culver superintendent from 1896 to 1910, was born in King and Queen County, Va., in 1843. He joined the Confederate army in 1861, serving as a lieutenant and aid-de-camp to Gen. Henry Wise. He was present at Gen. Lee’s surrender at Appomattox.
  • The Indianapolis Star. Tuesday, September 5, 1911
CULVER, Ind. - Sept 4. - (Special) - col. Alexander Frederick fleet, a noted classical scholar and educator, who was for eleven years professor of Greek in the University of Missouri and for fourteen years superintendent of the culver Military Academy in Indiana, is dead at the home of his son in Atlanta, Ga.
  • Atlanta Constitution. 6 Sep 1911 - Atlanta, Georgia
Colonel Alexander F. Fleet - The funeral of Colonel Alexander Fleet, who died at the home of his son, Professor J. S. fleet, was held from the residence, 35 Peachtree place, yesterday afternoon at 3:30 o'clock. The service was conducted by Rev. Charles Daniel and Rev. Richard Orme Flinn. The interment, in West View was private.
References
  1.   Bagby, Alfred. King and Queen County, Virginia. (New York: Neale Pub. Co., 1908)
    Page 378.

    This from Col. Fleet of Culver: Thos. Walker, ancestor of the distinguished Dr. Thos. Walker, and Riveses of Albemarle (see Thomas Walker (explorer)), and Gov. Thos. Walker Gilmer (see Thomas Walker Gilmer), was from K. & Q." - Semple, John and James S., were sons of Rev. James Semple of England. John settled in King and Queen, marrying a Miss Walker. There son, Robert B.A. Croghan[sic] Semple[recte] married Lucy Clark, and their son, Major Croghan, then a mere youth, held the fort at Sandusky against Gen. Proctor (see Henry Procter (British Army officer)) with a large force of Indians and whites. He also distinguished himself at Tippecanoe (see Battle of Tippecanoe).

  2.   Virginia Magazine of History and Biography. (Richmond, Virginia: Virginia Historical Society)
    Vol. 2, Page 76, Ending June 1895.
  3.   Brown, John Howard. Lamb's Biographical Dictionary of the United States;. (Boston, Mass.: James H. Lamb Company, March 1900)
    Vol. 3. Page 119.

    FLEET, Alexander Frederick, educator, was born in King and Queen county, Va., in 1843 ; son of Dr. Benjamin and Maria Louisa (Wacker) Fleet. His father, Dr. Benjamin Fleet, born Jan. 25, 1818, and died March 8, 1865, was a physician and magistrate in King and Queen county, state of Virginia. His first ancestor in America was Capt. Henry Fleet, who came to Virginia about 1621, and was a member of the Maryland legislature and of the Virginia house of burgesses. He received his education at Fleetwood and Aberdeen academies, Va., and -at the University of Virginia, which he left in 1861 to enter the military service of the Confederate states. He remained in the service throughout the entire period of the war, and at its close he returned to the university, where he studied, 1865-67. He was a teacher at Kemnore school, Fredericksburg, Va., 1867-68; and had charge of the department of Greek in the William Jewell college 1868-73. He also served as chairman of the faculty. He was president of the Baptist female college at Lexington, Mo., 1873-79; was professor of Greek in the Missouri state university, Columbia, Mo., 1879-90, and in 1890 founded and became superintendent of the Missouri military academy at Mexico, Mo. In 1891 he was president of the Missouri state teachers association. In 1896, upon the destruction by fire of the Missouri military academy, he transferred his school to Culver, Ind., and united with the Culver military academy, of which he had twice been superintendent. This school in 1900 had an enrollment of 220 cadets.

  4.   Hereditary Sempill Lords of Blackburn, Kirkhouse, and Long Dreghorn & Clan Sempill.

    Arthur, Stanley Clisby; Charles Patton Dimitry; and George Campbell de Kernion. Old Families of Louisiana. (New Orleans, Louisiana: Harmanson, 1931), Pages 355, 361, 2009.

    Page 355 - Robert Semple, brother to Steele Semple -
    Page 361 - Robert Semple, a brother of Sarah Jane Semple who married Col. Thomas Butler (q. v.), was descended from the Semples of Kirkhouse, Scotland.
    Samuel Semple of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

  5.   Virginia Genealogical Society Quarterly
    Vol. 2, No. 1, Page 9., 01 Jan 1964.

    Page 9 - The Fleet Family - The Fleet family in Virginia stems from one William Fleet, gent., of Chatham in Kent, a member of the Virginia Company under the third charter. Four of William’s younger sons – Edward, Reginold, John, and Henry—emigrated to Virginia in 1621 with their uncle Sir Francis Wyatt, later to be governor of the colony. While the first three brothers settled eventually in Maryland, Henry settled in Virginia, where he was a member of the House of Burgesses in 1652.

    Captain William Fleet (1757 – 1833), a descendant of Henry Fleet, married Sarah Browne Tomlin, a young widow, and lived at Rural Felicity, where he was a lay representative in the Mattaponi Church. He was a member of the Virginia Constitution Covention of 1788. In 1800 he acquired Goshen, which became the family home, from Spencer Roane, a justice of the United States Supreme Court. After moving to Goshen, William Fleet became a member of the Bruington Baptist Church. Whether he was prompted by a desire to make a complete break from England in the form of the Anglican Church or whether he was influenced by his neighbor—and, later, son-in-lawDr. Robert Baylor Semple, pastor of the Bruington church, is not clear. The family thenceforth seems to have remained loyal to the Baptist faith.

  6.   Alexander Frederick Fleet, in Find A Grave.