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Rasselas Patterson “R.P.” Reynolds

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Rasselas Patterson “R.P.” Reynolds

Birth
Woodford, Woodford County, Illinois, USA
Death
8 Dec 1919 (aged 76)
Walla Walla, Walla Walla County, Washington, USA
Burial
Walla Walla, Walla Walla County, Washington, USA Add to Map
Plot
Masonic Section
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R.P. was the son of Almon and Harriet (Griswold) Reynolds.

Rasselas P. "R.P." Reynolds' obituary appeared on the first page of the Walla Walla Union-Bulletin on 9 Dec. 1919 and appears here courtesy of the Washington State Archives.

R.P. Reynolds, Ex-City Clerk, Called By Death

Well-Known G.A.R. Veteran Passes Away After Illness of Several Weeks

Answered First Call For Volunteers During War Between States

R.P. Reynolds, aged 77, died at a local hospital yesterday morning after an illness of several weeks. The funeral will be held from the MacMartin and Hill chapel Wednesday afternoon at 2 o'clock.

Rasselas P. Reynolds was a Civil War veteran, a pioneer of the West and had been prominent in political life in Walla Walla. He answered the first call for volunteers for the Civil War and fought through the four years as a member of the Thirty-third Illinois Volunteer Infantry, enlisting in Company F on August 21, 1861. He participated in the Vicksburg campaign, the siege of Mobile and other great operations of the War, taking part in many battles.

He came to Walla in 1866 with a government surveying party. He was appointed clerk of the United States district court in 1869 and held the position three years. He then became bookkeeper in Reynolds and Day's bank, remaining with them until 1879, when he resigned, and in 1880 moved to Alpowa, Wash., where for six years he kept a general store and a warehouse. Returning to Walla Walla, he engaged in the business of painting roofs with a special material of his own manufacture. In January 1899, he was appointed city clerk to complete an unexpired term of C.N. McLean. He was re-elected until 1905, when he was succeeded by T.D.S. Hart. After his retirement, he again took up the manufacture and sale of wood preservative on which he held the patent.

Mr. Reynolds was a charter member of A. Lincoln Post No. 4 G. A. R., of which he was past commander. He was married in Walla Walla on October 28, 1888, to Miss Carrie M. Baker, a native of Maine, who survives him.

Mr. Reynolds was born in Fort Wayne, Indiana on January 23, 1843. He was reared there and in Whiteside County, Illinois, where his family moved in 1854. He received his education in the public schools and in the State Normal University of Bloomington, Illinois, but left that school to join the Union army and after the war came west.

Besides his wife, Mr. Reynolds is survived by a grand-daughter, Miss Eleanor Virginia Powell, of Chicago, and two cousins, Allen H. and Harry A. Reynolds, of Walla Walla.

R.P. married Nell Kimball in Walla Walla on Sept. 3, 1872. That marriage ended in divorce and he re-married Carrie M. Baker in Walla Walla, at the home of her mother, Mrs. Caroline A. Baker. He was pre-deceased by his daughter, Mary Belle.
R.P. was the son of Almon and Harriet (Griswold) Reynolds.

Rasselas P. "R.P." Reynolds' obituary appeared on the first page of the Walla Walla Union-Bulletin on 9 Dec. 1919 and appears here courtesy of the Washington State Archives.

R.P. Reynolds, Ex-City Clerk, Called By Death

Well-Known G.A.R. Veteran Passes Away After Illness of Several Weeks

Answered First Call For Volunteers During War Between States

R.P. Reynolds, aged 77, died at a local hospital yesterday morning after an illness of several weeks. The funeral will be held from the MacMartin and Hill chapel Wednesday afternoon at 2 o'clock.

Rasselas P. Reynolds was a Civil War veteran, a pioneer of the West and had been prominent in political life in Walla Walla. He answered the first call for volunteers for the Civil War and fought through the four years as a member of the Thirty-third Illinois Volunteer Infantry, enlisting in Company F on August 21, 1861. He participated in the Vicksburg campaign, the siege of Mobile and other great operations of the War, taking part in many battles.

He came to Walla in 1866 with a government surveying party. He was appointed clerk of the United States district court in 1869 and held the position three years. He then became bookkeeper in Reynolds and Day's bank, remaining with them until 1879, when he resigned, and in 1880 moved to Alpowa, Wash., where for six years he kept a general store and a warehouse. Returning to Walla Walla, he engaged in the business of painting roofs with a special material of his own manufacture. In January 1899, he was appointed city clerk to complete an unexpired term of C.N. McLean. He was re-elected until 1905, when he was succeeded by T.D.S. Hart. After his retirement, he again took up the manufacture and sale of wood preservative on which he held the patent.

Mr. Reynolds was a charter member of A. Lincoln Post No. 4 G. A. R., of which he was past commander. He was married in Walla Walla on October 28, 1888, to Miss Carrie M. Baker, a native of Maine, who survives him.

Mr. Reynolds was born in Fort Wayne, Indiana on January 23, 1843. He was reared there and in Whiteside County, Illinois, where his family moved in 1854. He received his education in the public schools and in the State Normal University of Bloomington, Illinois, but left that school to join the Union army and after the war came west.

Besides his wife, Mr. Reynolds is survived by a grand-daughter, Miss Eleanor Virginia Powell, of Chicago, and two cousins, Allen H. and Harry A. Reynolds, of Walla Walla.

R.P. married Nell Kimball in Walla Walla on Sept. 3, 1872. That marriage ended in divorce and he re-married Carrie M. Baker in Walla Walla, at the home of her mother, Mrs. Caroline A. Baker. He was pre-deceased by his daughter, Mary Belle.


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