James R. Thornton


James Riddle Thornton was an acting President of Hampden–Sydney College for two-and-a-half weeks in 1904.

Biography

Thornton was born to Lieutenant Colonel John T. Thornton and Martha Jane Thornton in 1853 in Farmville, Virginia. James Thornton had two brothers, William M. Thornton — Professor of Applied Mathematics, Chairman of the Faculty, and Dean of Engineering at the University of Virginia; and Harrison R. Thornton — a teacher and missionary in Cape Prince of Wales, Alaska who was killed in 1893, the only missionary to Alaska slain by a native Alaskan.
Thornton was the valedictorian, 1871 graduate of Hampden–Sydney College and also the principal of Prince Edward Academy in Worsham, Virginia from 1873 to 1881 and a professor of Latin at Central University from 1881 to 1883.
Thornton later went on to be a professor of Mathematics, an Instructor of Engineering, and the Treasurer at Hampden–Sydney College for a total of twenty-five years, starting in 1884. He was a brother of Phi Kappa Psi and was the "Frater in Residence" while a professor at the College. Known as "Uncle Jamie" to his students, Thornton was a beloved figure at the College and was presented with an award by the senior class of 1909 to honor Thornton's twenty-five years of service to the institution. He married his wife, Maria Edmunds, on June 22, 1910.
Thornton's childhood home known as "Thornton House" was located in present-day Farmville, Virginia. After James's father, Colonel Thornton was killed in 1862 at the Battle of Sharpsburg, General Robert E. Lee made a brief condolence visit to the widow and children of Colonel Thornton at Thornton House on April 7, 1865 — in the midst of Lee's Retreat.