Margaret O'Connor Wilson

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BornMargaret O'Connor
1856 (1856)
DiedAugust 19, 1942(1942-08-19) (aged 85–86)
SpouseArthur McDermott Wilson
Children2
Margaret O'Connor Wilson
Wilson circa 1880
President General of the Confederated Southern Memorial Association
Personal details
BornMargaret O'Connor
1856 (1856)
DiedAugust 19, 1942(1942-08-19) (aged 85–86)
SpouseArthur McDermott Wilson
Children2
Occupationphilanthropist

Margaret O'Connor Wilson (née O'Connor; also known as Mrs. A. McD. Wilson; 1856–1942) was an American civic leader and philanthropist. Prominent in civic and patriotic organizations in Atlanta for many years,[1] she was also known also for her religious and philanthropic work. Among the many positions that she held, Wilson served as President General of the Confederated Southern Memorial Association (CSMA).[2]

Margaret (nickname "Maggie") Adeline O'Connor was born in Gainesville,[2] Hall County, Georgia,[3] in 1856.[4] She was the daughter of Elizabeth Pettigrew Thompson and Patrick O’Connor. She was descended on her mother's side from colonial and Revolutionary ancestry which included the families of Thompson, Wade, Gibbs and Weeks of Virginia, and on her father's side from Roderick O’Connor, the last High King of Ireland. Her father, Lieutenant O’Connor, under the command of General Lucius J. Gartrell in the Confederate States Army, was one of five sons who died fighting for the Confederacy during the American Civil War, and one uncle, Captain James O’Connor, filled an unknown grave in the cemetery at Camp Chase, Ohio, victim to prison life. Dr. William Thompson, an uncle, served as surgeon major for two years with the Arkansas troops.[2]

In 1862, her family removed to Atlanta, Georgia where she subsequently resided. Her earliest recollections center around the civil war period when, as a child, she made lint for the wounded soldiers by unraveling old linen, and going to the hospital trains with her mother to carry soup and delicacies to the sick and wounded soldiers. When the order came from General William Tecumseh Sherman for the women and children to leave Atlanta, as he would shell and burn the town, with her mother and two little sisters in one end of a boxcar, and the African Americans they enslaved in the other, they fled. One month was occupied in being transported the 175 miles (282 km) to Augusta, Georgia, where the family remained until Sherman had completed his destructive work.[2]

Wilson was educated in the private schools of Atlanta, and finished at the Young Ladies’ Seminary under Professor and Mrs. Hale.[2]

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