Elinor Jackson

Elinor Jackson
Born Elinor Junkin
(1825-03-06)March 6, 1825
Pennsylvania, U.S.A.
Died October 2, 1854(1854-10-02) (aged 29)
Lexington, Virginia
Resting place Stonewall Jackson Memorial Cemetery, Lexington, Virginia
Residence Lexington, Virginia
Spouse(s) Thomas J. "Stonewall" Jackson (1853-1854; her death)
Children 1 stillborn

Elinor Junkin Jackson, born 1825, died 1854, was Thomas J. "Stonewall" Jackson's first wife. She died in child birth a year after their marriage.

Youth

Elinor was the daughter of the prominent Presbyterian theologian George Junkin who since 1848 was president of Washington College in Lexington, Virginia.

Marriage

Elinor and Jackson met and became friends in her father's home as he frequently socialized with George Junkin. The shy young professor and the old college president were united by common interests in theology and Presbyterian doctrine. Elinor and Jackson both taught at the Presbyterian Sunday school in Lexington. Suddenly their friendship changed into love, and they became engaged in 1853. But Elinor's older sister Margaret was very jealous of their relationship, and the engagement was broken off on her behest. It resumed again, however, with Margaret's reluctant blessing, and George Junkin married Elinor and Jackson in August 1853.[1] [2]

Her sister Margaret was the second wife of Virginia Military Institute founder John Thomas Lewis Preston, who served with Thomas Jackson on the VMI faculty, and served on Jackson's staff during the American Civil War.[3]

Death

The couple were extremely close, and through Elinor's influence Jackson's already strong faith deepened. In October 1854 Elinor was in labor, but the outcome was not happy. She gave birth to a stillborn baby and died herself shortly thereafter due to pregnancy complications. Jackson was devastated by grief but his faith supported him. The couple had been living with her father, and Jackson continued to live there for several years until he began courting Anna Morrison, the woman that would become his second wife.[4] [5]

References

Notes

  1. Robertson 1997, pp. 144-149.
  2. Gwynne 2014, pp. 144-146.
  3. Arnold, Thomas Jackson (1916). Early Life and Letters of General Thomas J. Jackson: "Stonewall" Jackson. New York, NY: Fleming H. Revell. p. 205.
  4. Robertson 1997, pp. 157-158.
  5. Gwynne 2014, pp. 147-150.

Sources

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