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Patterson's commands included Chocura, Currituck and James Adger. Richmond served as his flagship in the Asiatic Squadron. From 1873 to 1876 he commanded the Washington Navy Yard, as his father had done in 1836–1839. On January 2, 1868, Patterson was elected as a member of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States. [2]
C. Edward Weston Carpender; Charles C. Carpenter (admiral) James Henry Carpenter; William L. Carpenter; Augustus Case; Silas Casey III; Douglas R. Cassel; Colby Mitchell Chester
Patterson was born in Shieldsboro (now Bay St. Louis, Mississippi), the son of Captain Daniel Patterson.He was the brother of Admiral Thomas H. Patterson, of Elizabeth Catherine Patterson who married George Mifflin Bache (brother of Alexander Dallas Bache) and of George Ann Patterson who married Admiral David Dixon Porter.
Julian Patterson (1884–1972), British Royal Navy rear admiral Thomas H. Patterson (1820–1889), U.S. Navy rear admiral Wilfrid Patterson (1893–1954), British Royal Navy admiral
Rear Admiral Freeland A. Daubin, 1942–1944; Rear Admiral Charles W. Styer, 1944–1946; Rear Admiral John Wilkes, 1946–1947; Rear Admiral James Fife, Jr., 1947–1950; Rear Admiral Stuart S. "Sunshine" Murray, 1950–1952; Rear Admiral George C. "Turkey Neck" Crawford, 1952–1954; Rear Admiral Frank T. Watkins, 1954–1957
Eliza Catherine Patterson (1815–1884), who married George Mifflin Bache, a brother of Alexander Dallas Bache. George Ann Patterson (1818–1893), who married Adm. David Dixon Porter, a son of U.S. Minister Resident to the Ottoman Empire David Porter, in 1839. [13] Patterson died on August 25, 1839.
Departing Norfolk 11 January 1879, Richmond passed into the Mediterranean and through the Suez Canal, hoisting the flag of Rear Admiral Thomas H. Patterson at Yokohama on 4 July 1879. For four years Richmond cruised among the principal ports of China, Japan, and the Philippines, serving as flagship until 19 December 1883 when Trenton relieved her.
On 2 November 1935, [2] Ramage married Barbara Alice Pine, the daughter of U.S. Coast Guard Vice Admiral James Pine. They had two sons and two daughters. Ramage died of cancer in his home at Bethesda, Maryland, in 1990. He and his wife Barbara Alice (1913–2002) are buried in Arlington National Cemetery. [25]