David W. Lewis (lawyer) explained

David W. Lewis
Order:1st
President of the
North Georgia Agricultural College (now University of North Georgia)
Term Start:1873
Term End:1885
Predecessor:none
Successor:William Starr Basinger
Birth Date:c. 1815
Birth Place:Lumpkin County, Georgia
Death Date:12 December 1885 (aged 70)
Death Place:Gainesville, Georgia
Alma Mater:University of Georgia

David W. Lewis (c. 1815-1885) was an American lawyer, civil servant and lecturer.

He was born in about 1815 in Hancock County, Georgia. After graduating from the University of Georgia in 1837 he pursued careers as a lawyer, an agricultural reformer, and a planter. One of his first roles in public service began in 1839 as secretary to Georgia governor George N. Gilmer. He is also known for his service in the Congress of the Confederate States during the Civil War. In 1873 Lewis became the first president of North Georgia Agricultural College, an institution now formally known as the University of North Georgia. In addition to his service as president at the college, Lewis was also one of the two professors at the school in its early years, teaching Greek and English literature.

Lewis fell ill in the during the fall of 1885. In his final days he relocated to the house of his daughter, H. H. Perry, in Gainesville, Georgia. He died on December 18, 1885, and was buried at Mount Hope Cemetery in Dahlonega.[1]

References

Notes and References

  1. Book: Roberts, William Pittman . Georgia's Best Kept Secret: A History of North Georgia College . Alumni Association of North Georgia College . 1998 . Dahlonega, Ga . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120310171640/http://www.northgeorgiaalumni.org/page.aspx?pid=297 . March 10, 2012 .