Is your surname Lander?

Connect to 3,624 Lander profiles on Geni

Share your family tree and photos with the people you know and love

  • Build your family tree online
  • Share photos and videos
  • Smart Matching™ technology
  • Free!

Samuel Lander

Birthdate:
Death: July 14, 1904 (71)
Immediate Family:

Son of Rev Samuel Lander, I and Eliza Ann Lander
Husband of Laura Ann McPherson
Father of John McPherson Lander
Brother of William Lander and Sarah Catherine Sherrill

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Samuel Lander

https://www.ncpedia.org/biography/lander-samuel

Samuel Lander, teacher, author, and clergyman, born in Lincolnton, was the son of the Reverend Samuel Lander and his wife, Elizabeth (Eliza) Ann Miller, both natives of Ireland. He began school at age four and after the school day was introduced to Greek and Latin by his uncle, J. W. Murphy, even before he had studied English grammar. Soon afterwards his sisters began to teach him to play the piano and guitar, while a teacher at the local academy taught him sight singing. In 1847 or 1848 he was sent to Lexington to continue his studies under Murphy, who had moved to that town. In 1849 Lander entered the sophomore class at Randolph-Macon College in Virginia; he was graduated in 1852, at age nineteen, with highest honors. While in college he taught himself fine penmanship and developed the habit of taking long walks with friends while discussing scholarly subjects.

Returning home to Lincolnton after graduation, Lander studied civil engineering and participated in the surveying of a new road from Lincolnton to Charlotte. He also began a practice that he continued almost until the year of his death—the study of foreign languages. Although he never learned to speak them, he was able to read German, French, Spanish, Italian, Hebrew, and Portuguese; further, he made considerable progress during a three-year study of Volapük, an artificial international language. Young Lander became tutor to the children in the Michael Hoke family but in 1853 joined the faculty of Catawba College as an instructor. In 1855 he received a master's degree from Trinity College, which also awarded him an honorary D.D. degree in 1878.

From Catawba College, Lander moved for a brief time to Olin Institute in the northern part of Iredell County. He then taught foreign languages at Randolph-Macon College for a year before accepting a post at Greensboro Female College, where he remained for three years. He next became president of the High Point Female Seminary. Returning to his native town, he founded the Lincolnton Female Seminary, but in 1868–70 he was president of Davenport Female College in Lenoir. Late in 1870 Lander moved to South Carolina to become copresident of Spartanburg Female College. However, after less than a year he was persuaded to accept appointment as a Methodist minister in charge of the Williamston Circuit and to establish and direct the Williamston Female College. In February 1872, he began the work that was to occupy him for the remainder of his life at the new school, then in Williamston, S.C., that now bears his name—Lander College. In 1904 the college was moved to Greenwood.

In 1861 Lander was licensed as a local preacher. During the Civil War, to meet the need of Southern schools, he was persuaded by North Carolina educational leaders to write several textbooks. He was the author of Our Own Primary Arithmetic and Our Own School Arithmetic, both published in Greensboro in 1863, and of The Verbal Primer, published in 1865. The latter was a pioneer in teaching reading by the word rather than with the alphabet.

Lander married Laura Ann McPherson in 1853, and they had eleven children: Lily, Martha, John, William Tertius, Augustus, Nell, Kathleen, Malcolm, Frank, Christie, and Ernest. All but two—Lily and William—bore the middle name McPherson.

Seventh child and third son . . .
Jan 30 1833

 Lincolnton North Carolina

Misc:
Re: the Civil War . . . 'wrote in favor of the Southern cause.' S. Lander was an honorary chaplian and a Confederate cross was placed on his grave in Williamston South Carolina.
Residence:
Lexington, Davidson, North Carolina, United States
Lexington, Davidson, North Carolina, United States
1848
Residence:
Boydton, Mecklenburg, Virginia, United States
Between 1849 and 1852
Census:
1850

 Lincoln county, Lincoln, North Carolina, USA

Education:
... as the Valedictorian.
1852

 Randolph-Macon College

Occupation:
... taught Latin and mathematics at several colleges;studied Theology on his own and was licensed to preach in 1860. He continued to teach and preach in North Carolina during and after the Civil War.In 1871 he became joint proprietor of the Spartanburg Female College.1872 appointed President of Columbia College; however, the schoold did not reopen as expected.
Between 1852 and 1872
Known Number of Children:
11
Burial:

 Williamston South Carolina

Marriage:
Marriage to: <Private>
Dec 20 1853

 Lincoln,North Carolina

Occupation:
Adjunct Professor of Language, Randolph-Macon College
Circa 1856

 Boydton, Mecklenburg, Virginia, United States

Occupation:
Greensboro Female College
Between 1856 and 1859
Occupation:
President, High Point Normal School
Between 1859 and 1862
Residence:
South Division, Guilford, North Carolina, United States
South Division, Guilford, North Carolina, United States
1860
Occupation:
President, Lincolnton Female Seminary
Between 1862 and 1868
Occupation:
President, Davenport Female College
Between 1868 and 1871
Residence:
Lenoir, Caldwell, North Carolina, United States
Lenoir, Caldwell, North Carolina, United States
1870
Occupation:
Professor, Spartanburg Female College
Circa 1872
Occupation:
President, Williamston Female College
Between 1872 and 1904

 Williamston, Anderson, South Carolina, United States

Occupation:
S. Lander accepted a calling to the Methodist Church in Williamston, showed up with a wife and seven children. He soon proposed to the church that they 'rent' the closed resort hotel for him and his family, allow him to start a school for girls and he would serve the church for no salary. Thus began Williamston Female Academy.
1873

 Williamston South Carolina

Residence:
Williamston, Anderson, South Carolina, United States
Williamston, Anderson, South Carolina, United States
1880
Residence:
ED 70 Williamston Township Williamston town, Anderson, South Carolina, United States
ED 70 Williamston Township Williamston town, Anderson, South Carolina, United States
1900
Death:
July 14 1904

 Williamston South Carolina
view all

Samuel Lander's Timeline

1833
January 30, 1833
1858
December 17, 1858
Lincolnton, Lincoln County, NC, United States
1904
July 14, 1904
Age 71