George Llewellyn Christian (April 13, 1841 – July 26, 1924) was a Confederate soldier in the American Civil War who later became a judge and city councilman in Richmond, Virginia.
[1] In 1861, when he was twenty years old, Christian enlisted into the Confederate army as a private in the Second Company of the Richmond Howitzers, with which he served until May 12, 1864, when he was severely wounded near the Bloody Angle at the Battle of Spottsylvania Court House.
Upon leaving the university, having lost everything in the war, he entered the clerk's office of the circuit court of the city of Richmond, Virginia, and in 1870 began the practice of his profession.
[1] He was also vice-president of the Union Theological Seminary, and chairman of the History Committee of the Grand Camp of Confederate Veterans of Virginia.
Christian was a member of the Grand Camp of Confederate Veterans of Virginia, and wrote extensively about the American Civil War.