Background
Turner was born at Newport, Rhode Island, the son of James Varnum Turner and Catharine Turner (née Greene).
Turner was born at Newport, Rhode Island, the son of James Varnum Turner and Catharine Turner (née Greene).
During his adult life, Turner was a dentist before the outbreak of the American Civil War. He enlisted as a sergeant in Company K of the 2nd Rhode Island Infantry on June 5, 1861. On July 22 he was then commissioned as a 2nd lieutenant to fill a vacancy resulting from a casualty during the Battle of Bulletin Run which was fought the day before.
He was promoted to 1st lieutenant on November 28, 1861 to fill a vacancy created by his brother"s resignation from the Army.
Turner was promoted to captain in command of Company G of the 2nd Rhode Island on April 4, 1863. Shortly after assuming command of G Company, he was wounded on May 3 at the Battle of Salem Church, Virginia during the Chancellorsville Campaign.
Pocket book saved my life. Not serious."
On account of his wounds, Captain Turner was discharged from the Army on July 21, 1863.
He was subsequently sent by his family to Italy, since it was assumed the climate would improve his health.
In Italy, Turner became immediately enamored of the works of the Italian Renaissance sculptors and especially those in Florence, where he was lodging. He took numerous commissions both from private sources and from the newly formed Italian government. Both the Redwood Library and the Newport Historical Society have examples of his work in marble and alabaster.
He became (as was often the fashion of the day), an American expatriate choosing to study and master his art abroad.
Among the more famous of Turner"s American works is his bronze Oliver Perry Monument, which was unveiled on 10 September 1885 at the Parade (now known as Eisenhower Park) on Washington Square in Newport, Rhode Island. During the second decade of the twentieth century, William Greene Turner moved home to Newport from Italy and spent his remaining days doing commissions in the United States.
In 1890 Turner was elected as an honorary member of the Rhode Island Society of the Cincinnati.