William Pliny Dickinson was born
to George L. and Lucy (Evans) Dickinson in Walpole, New Hampshire,
on May 31, 1842. George moved west in 1845 “and established
himself in Dubuque, Iowa, the family following in the autumn,
making the journey in twenty-one days, the only railroad on the
route being from Albany to Schenectady.” William did well in high
school, being “proficient in languages,” and was still a student
when Confederate guns fired on Fort Sumter on April 12, 1861.
Eleven days later he enlisted in the 1st Iowa Infantry, a regiment
mustered for only ninety days which most in the North thought
would be sufficient time to end the Southern uprising. At the end
of his term, he was mustered out on August 21, 1861, but the war
continued.
A year later, on August 19, 1862, he gave his occupation as
hotel clerk when he was enrolled at Dubuque by Manchester attorney
Salue Van Anda in what would be Company H of the state’s 21st
regiment of volunteer infantry. William was described as being 5'
8" tall with blue eyes, dark hair and a dark complexion. Like
other volunteers, he was paid $25.00 of the $100.00 enlistment
bounty and a $2.00 premium. They were mustered in as a regiment on
September 9, 1862, at Dubuque’s Camp Franklin where they received
brief, largely ineffective, training, before leaving for war on
September 16th on board the
Henry Clay and two barges tied alongside. William, perhaps due
to his prior military experience, was promoted to Sergeant Major,
the highest of the non-commissioned ranks.
The regiment’s initial service was in Missouri - Rolla,
Salem, Houston, Hartville and then - after a wagon train bringing
supplies from the railhead in Rolla was attacked - back to
Houston. They left Houston on January 27th, reached West Plains on
the 30th and from there started a movement to the northeast on
February 8, 1863. They reached Ironton on the 21st and Iron
Mountain on the 25th. On March 11th they arrived in the old French
town of St. Genevieve and James Noble resigned as 2nd Lieutenant
to accept a promotion to 1st Lieutenant. Since this was a
commissioned rank, Colonel Sam Merrill wrote to Governor Kirkwood
and recommended William Dickinson to take Noble’s place. The
Company’s captain, Joseph Watson, was in agreement, but Major Van
Anda said the rank-and-file were not and he wrote to Adjutant
General Baker proposing 1st Sergeant and fellow Manchester
resident Willis Brown for the promotion.
The “boys came to me as they always do when in trouble,” he
said and he asked that Baker “arrest the proceeding in favor of
Dickinson.” This was an early indication of a feud developing
between Merrill and Van Anda. The appointment stalled and, perhaps
disheartened by the delay and the fact that twenty-six of his
comrades had expressed their preference for Willis Brown, William
asked to be reduced to the ranks. His request was granted on April
27th, he served the balance of his enlistment as a Private, and
the position of 2nd Lieutenant remained vacant.
From St. Genevieve they were transported south to
Milliken’s Bend where they were assigned to a corps led by General
John McClernand. With two other corps, they moved slowly south
along the west side of the Mississippi until reaching Disharoon’s
Plantation from where, on April 30th, the three corps crossed the
river to the Bruinsburg landing in an amphibious movement that
would not be exceeded until Normandy during World War II.
As the point regiment for the entire army, they were the
first to encounter the enemy - about midnight near the Abram
Shaifer house - and the next day William participated with his
regiment in the Battle of Port Gibson. On the 16th he was present
during the Battle of Champion’s Hill when the regiment was held
out of action, but on the 17th participated in a successful
assault on entrenched Confederates at the Big Black River.
Regimental casualties included seven killed in action, eighteen
with wounds that would soon prove fatal and forty with non-fatal
wounds. After burying their dead and caring for the wounded, they
joined other regiments in the rear of Vicksburg.
An assault on the 19th had been unsuccessful but, with more
troops having arrived, General Grant thought another assault would
have better results. The morning of the 22nd opened with cannon
fire until 10:00 a. m. when, along the entire Union line, the
infantry charged. This too was unsuccessful and the 21st Iowa had
another twenty-three of its members killed in action, a dozen
fatally wounded and at least forty-eight with non-fatal wounds.
Among them was William Dickinson who sustained a serious wound to
his right shoulder and back and was taken to the division
hospital. When the regiment’s surgeon, William Orr, recommended a
thirty-day leave, William returned to Dubuque but his recovery was
slow and Dr. Benjamin Cluer recommended several times that the
leave be extended. William was still in Dubuque on September 20,
1863, when Dr. Cluer recommended another extension, but William
eventually went south and by the end of October was in a
convalescent camp in New Orleans. Still there on December 7th, he
was discharged from the military and returned to Iowa.
On April 11, 1864, William Dickinson and Mary Lee Jones
were married. The next month William began studying dentistry in
the Dubuque office of Dr. E. L. Clark. Reading everything he could
buy or borrow, William opened his own dentistry office in Charles
City in May 1865. The
following year, on July 9, 1866, Mary gave birth to a son. Three
days later Mary died and on October 16th their son died. William
sold his dental office and moved to Joliet, Illinois, but by the
summer of 1868 was back in Dubuque practicing dentistry.
On December 6, 1871, he married Evalina Samantha D.
Robinson. William and Evalina had two daughters: Lucy Evalina
Dickinson born October 29, 1874, and Gertrude Dickinson born
November 20, 1878. In 1883 and 1884, William attended the
Pennsylvania College of Dentistry where he received a degree as a
doctor of dental surgery (D.D.S.). After returning to Iowa, he
taught a course to the senior dentistry class at Iowa State
University and then lectured in a “Practitioner’s course” in
Chicago’s College of Dental Surgery.
In 1890 he moved to Minneapolis where he taught in the
Dental Department of the University of Minnesota and, for five
years, served as Dean. William’s tenure in Minneapolis was
described by one writer as his “most fruitful in service to his
profession bringing greater numbers of students and practitioners
under the influence of his character.” He resigned from the
University of Minnesota when his “eyesight began to fail and for a
time he gave up professional activities” while he and Evalina
lived with Gertrude and her husband, R. S. Parker, in Alabama. In
1910, after surgery restored sight in one eye, William and Mary
returned to Minnesota “but soon after went to Portland, Oregon in
1910.”
In Portland he worked as a professor of therapeutics and
pathology at North Pacific College on the corner of Oregon Street
and Sixth Avenue NW. In 1912 he applied for, and presumably
received, an age-based pension although government records are
incomplete. His health began to deteriorate in 1918 and the
following year, on November 21st, William was suffering from
arteriosclerosis when he died. His body was cremated. He was
survived by his wife, two daughters, their husbands, and eight
grandchildren. An obituary in the Journal of the National Dental
Association recognized him as “a man of unusual ability, high
ideals and force of character” while
the Delta Sigma Delta Desmos (a publication of dentists and
dental students) recalled that “no meeting seemed quite complete
without his gentle and kindly presence.”
Lucy had married E. F. Hertz, a dentist who, like William,
had been connected to North Pacific College. After William’s
death, Evalina lived with Lucy at 425 S. E. 68th Street, Portland.
Evalina broke her arm in 1935 and four months later, on October
29, 1935, at age eighty-seven, had a fatal heart attack. She is
interred in Wilhelms Portland Memorial Mausoleum.
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